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NUMISMATA CROMWELLIANA
:
OR,
THE MEDALLIC HISTORYOF
OLIVER CROMWELLlUnstraiefc bg his Coins, ffiibalst, ?*no .gtals,
BY
HENRY WILLIAM HENFREY,AUTHOR OF "A GUIDE TO ENGLISH COINS,"
MEMBER OP THE NUMISMATIC SOCIETY, MEMBER OP THE EOYAL ARCHEOLOGICALINSTITUTE, ASSOCIATE OP THE BRITISH ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION,
HON. POEEIGN ASSOCIATE OF THE EOYAL NUMISMATIC SOCIETY OF BELGIUM, ETC.
JOHN RUSSELL SMITH, 36, SOHO SQUARE, "*
1877.
[All Eights Resei-ved.
3
Entered at Stationers' Hall]
TO
THE MOST HONOUEABLE
THE EMINENT STATESMAN,
THE PATEON OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND AET,
AND A DESCENDANT OF THE CEOMWELL FAMILY,
THIS WOEK IS,
BY HIS PERMISSION,
. RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED.
PREFACE.
TN the present work, a complete historical description of all
the Coins, Medals, and Pattern Pieces of Oliver Cromwell
( himself a coin-collector), is attempted for the first time.
Vertue, Snelling, Folkes, and Ruding have all left but very
imperfect notes and sketches of Cromwellian numismatics, and
the late Mr. Hawkins never published anything on the subject
;
so that many vexed questions have not hitherto been thoroughly
discussed.
In the following pages Oliver's Coins, Medals, and Seals
are all carefully described, and the history of each piece given,
as far as it is now possible to ascertain it. In Chapters III.
and IV. will be found a full account of the Coins made in
1656—1658. The Author having personally searched all the
State Papers of the period, now preserved in the Public Record
Office, London, as well as the manuscripts, books, and pamphlets
of the same period, preserved in the British Museum, has been
enabled to print for the first time a large number of documents
and entries relating to Cromwell's Coins and Seals, which throw
great light on their history, and supply facts which were quite
unsuspected by previous numismatic writers. With regard to
the coins dated 1656, it is shown—where the bullion they were
made of came from, how they were coined, who by, and in what
place, and the quantity made, with a detailed description of the
various denominations.
A concise history of Peter Blondeau, and his work in
England, will be found in Chapter III., whence it will be seen
that Simon only engraved the dies, while Blondeau performed
all the other processes of making the beautiful coins of Oliver.
With regard to the interesting question whether the coins
bearing Cromwell's head were ever current, the reader is re-
ferred to pages 150 et seq., where he will find, given in full, the
reasons why the Author is inclined to think that they were in
circulation for a brief period.
All the Pattern Pieces of Oliver, both gold and silver, will
be found carefully distinguished and described in Chapters III.
and IV. After a minute examination of the original steel dies
and punches of Cromwell's coins, both those made ,by Simon
and those executed by Tanner (which are now in the Royal
Mint, London), the Author has ventured to suggest a new
theory, viz :—that all the gold and silver pieces of Oliver that
have not "do." in the obverse legend were struck by Tanner in
the reign of George II., although he used the original punches
of Simon in making the dies (see pages 137 et seq.).
On pages 118 to 123 is a description of the Trial of the
Pix that took place in 1657, with copies of documents from the
records in the Royal Mint, taken by kind permission of the
Deputy-Master, the Hon. C. "W. Fremantle.
fnfnn. v
In the account of the Pattern Farthings of Oliver (pages
154 to 158), the Author has offered a new suggestion as to who
made them. A variety of one farthing, hitherto undescribed,
is also noticed.
The Medals have been fully described ; and, in the plates,
representations are given of several pieces never before en-
graved.
Chapter VI. gives the result of the Author's researches
concerning the Seals of the Protector. The State Papers in
the London Record Office, and the Manuscripts and Seals in
the British Museum have been laid under contribution, and
Mr. Thomas Dickson has obligingly searched the Scottish
Records.
No trouble has been spared in endeavouring to collect as
much information as possible on the subject of the work ; all
the best cabinets of coins, both public and private, have been
examined for their Cromwellian pieces, and the results embodied
in their proper places throughout the book.
The Plates (which give, by means of permanent photo-
graphy, absolutely correct representations of almost all Crom-
well's Coins, Medals, and Seals), have been executed by the
Autotype Company, from very accurate casts made from the
originals by Mr. Robert Ready. A few seals, which were too
much damaged to be photographed successfully, are reproduced
by means of wood-engraving.
Apologies are due to the original subscribers to this work
for the length of time which has elapsed between the publica-
vi |frifitn.
tion of the first and the issue of the last part. The delay has
been chiefly caused by a long and serious illness, which for the
time prevented the Author from attending to the book at all.
In conclusion, the Author desires to express his most
sincere thanks to the numerous gentlemen, both private collec-
tors and curators of museums, who have favoured him x with
detailed descriptions of Cromwellian pieces, or allowed him to
examine their collections. At the same time, he desires to
intimate that any further communications of new or remarkable
coins, medals, or seals of Oliver Cromwell, will be gratefully
acknowledged if addressed to him, care of the Publisher.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
Including the Years 1650—1651.
the dunbar medals (see also chapter v.)
the lord general medal ....the pattern farthing of 1651
PAGE1
12
CHAPTER II.
From the 16tH December, 1653, to the end of 1655.
the inauguration medal . . . . . .17the great seal for england (see also chapter vi.) . .19the privy seal „ „ „ » » • 20
the ordinance of treasons . . . . . .20the irish petition . . . . . . .22medals of cromwell and fairfax . . . . .25the commonwealth coins . . . . . .29mint affairs : officers of the mint . . . . .34
„ „ appointments of thomas simon . . .35„ „ committee of council for the mint . . .36,, „ counterfeiters of coin . . . .38„ „ sir ralph maddison's pamphlet . . .45
the peace of westminster medals . . . . .47the pattern farthings of 1654 . . . . .52
CHAPTER III.
Including the Years 1656—1657.
peter blondeau and the irish mint .
the coinage of 1656 : historical records
61
91
Vlll (CllllbntS.
PAGE
THE COINAGE OF 1656 : HISTORY OF THE BULLION USED . .98„ „ THE FIFTY-SHILLING PIECE . . .102
„ „ THE TWENTY-SHILLING PIECE . . .105
„ „ THE TEN-SHILLING PIECE . ,.106
„ „ THE HALF-CROWN .... 108
„ „ THE COINING PROCESS .... 109
„ „ THE PLACE WHERE THE COINS WERE MADE . 113
THE IMPORTATION AND EXPORTATION OF BULLION v . .115THE TRIAL OF THE PIX IN 1657.:.... 118
CHAPTER IV.
Including the Year 1658.
the coinage^ of 1658 : historical records
DESCRIPTION of the crown .
„ „ half-crown
„ „ shilling .
„ „ six-pence
imitations of the protector's coins
„ tanner's half-broad no. i.
„ tanner's half-broad no. ii.
„ tanner's crown .
„ tanner's shilling
„ tanner's six-pence
„ the dutch crown
„ imitation shillings
on the currency of oliver's coins
the pattern farthings of 1658
the dutch satirical medals ....the funeral medals .....
124
129
133
135
136
137
138
139
141
143
145
147
149
150
154
158
164
CHAPTER V.
Miscellaneous Medals of Oliver Cromwell.
THE DUNBAR MEDAL NO. IV.
THE IMITATION INAUGURATION MEDAL
DASSIER'S MEDAL .
OCTAGONAL MEDAL
173
174
175
176
KIRKS MEDAL
SMITH'S MEDAL
COPPER TOKEN
LEADEN TOKEN
dunnbnts. IX
PAGE176
177
177
178
CHAPTER VI.
The Seals of Oliver Cromwell.
the private seals used before he was made protector . .179the official signet used when he was general . . .184the official seals of the protectorate : the great seal for england 186
the privy seal for england . 192
the seal for letters of state . 193
the signet for england . . .195the seal for the english council . 196
the seals for the english law courts 199
the seals for the admiralty . 202
the seals for approbation of
preachers . . . .204the seal for the county of durham 207
the dover seal . . . 208
the great seal for scotland . 209
the quarter seal for scotland . 210
the privy seal for scotland . 211
the signet for scotland . .212the seal for the scottish council 212
the great seal for ireland . 214
the signet for ireland . .215the seal for the irish council . 216
the seals for the irish law courts 216
thomas simon's account for work done between 1650 and 1657 . 217
APPENDIX.
ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS
EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES
224
. 229
<El)npttv tf>e iPtvst,FEOM THE BATTLE OF DUNBAE, 3ed SEPTEMBEE, 1650,
TO DECEMBEE, 1653.
NTJMTSM ' TA CROMWELLIANA,-
CHAPTER I.
THE I'UKBaR IUEDA1.S.
The Numismatic History of Oliver Cromwell commences with the Battle of
Dunbar, on the 3d of September, 1650. For a full and clear description of
this memorable victory we cannot do better than refer the reader to Thomas
Carlyle's Letters and Speeches of Olicer Cromwell. There he will also find
printed the letter of Oliver himself, addressed to the Hon. William Lenthal,
Speaker of the Parliament of England, and dated the day after the Battle,
the 4th of September, 1650. This rather lengthy epistle was first published
in the contemporary newspaper Several! Proceedings in Parliament, under
the date of September 8th, on which day probably it was read before the
House. See Cromwelliana, pp. 87 to 91. From this account we learn, that
Cromwell, with an army of scarcely eleven thousand men, totally routed the
Scotch force of twenty-two thousand under General David Lesley. Three
thousand of the enemy were slain on the spot, and the prisoners numbered
ten thousand more, while the Parliament lost not thirty men. Captured, to
use Oliver's own words :" all their train, about thirty guns great and small,
•besides bullet, match and powder, very considerable Officers, about two-
hundred colours, above ten-thousand arms."— Letter to Ms brotlier Richard
Mayor, Esq., 4th September, 1650.
Two days after the receipt of these great news the House of Commons
made a resolution, important to our Medallic History, that Medals should be
given to the officers and soldiers engaged in this service in Scotland. This is
the first instance in English History where the same medal was distributed to
officers and men alike, as is our present practice ; and it was never done again
2 fhiraismafa; ©uffmtoflliana.
by the Supreme Authority until the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, when a
general distribution of silver medals to every man present at the action, was
authorized by the Sovereign's command. Many medals were, from much
earlier times than Dunbar up to the date of Waterloo, struck as merely
commemorative of great events, and a few were presented during this period
to officers of high rank, captains, and commanders of successful expeditions;
but in the whole space of our history preceding the Battle of Waterloo, the
Commonwealth with its Dunbar Medals stands alone in the instance of its
liberal gift of medals to be worn as personal decorations by every man of
every grade of the army.
The Order is thus recorded in the Journals of the House of Commons,
vol. vi., page 465 —" Die Martis, 10 Septembris, 1650.
" Ordered," That it be referred to the Committee of the Army, to consider what
Medals may be prepared, both for Officers and Soldiers, that were in this
Service in Scotland ; and set the Proportions and Values of them, and their
Number; and present the Estimate of them to the House."
Besides ordering an Estimate, the Parliament sent to Edinburgh an
Official Medallist to take the Effigies, Portrait, or Statue— as it is variously
called— of the Lord General, to be placed upon the Medals. This Thomas
Symonds, Symons, or Simon as it is now spelt, was, on the 25th April, 1649,
appointed sole Chief Engraver to the Mints and Seals, but as we intend to
give a detailed account of his Life further on in our work, we will leave him
for the present.
Fortunately for our object, there has been published a very interesting
and characteristic letter of Oliver relating to this journey of Simon from
London to Edinburgh. It is dated from the latter place on the 4th of Feb-
ruary, 1650-1, and addressed to the Committee of the Army at London.
Where the original manuscript is now preserved, we have not been able to
discover, after many enquiries. In 1772 it was in the possession of James
Lamb, Esq. of Fairford, Gloucestershire ; in 1780 it belonged to' John Eay-
mond, Esq. of the same place. But here all further trace is lost.
This letter was printed first in the Appendix to Harris's Life of Oliver
Cromwell, 1st edition, London 1761, page 519 (2nd edit. 1772, pp. 538-9),
and again by E. Gough in his edition, the second, of George Vertue's Works
of Thomas Simon, London 1780, page 74*. We reprint from Gough's ver-
sion, as although differing slightly in orthography from Harris's copy, it
appears to have been carefully collated with the original manuscript, and to
be therefore more accurate—
" For ye HonoUe the Comittee for the army these.
Gentl.
It was not a little wonder to me to see that you should send Mr. Symonds
so great a journey about a business importinge so little as far as it relates to
me, when as if my poore opinion may not be rejected by you, I have to offer
to that wch I thinke the most noble end, to witt the comemoracon of that
great mercie at Dunbar, & the gratuitie to the Army, wch might better be
expressed upon the meddal by engraving as on the one side the parliam' woh
I heare was intended & will do singulerly well, so on the other side an Army
wth this inscription over the head of it, The Lord of Hosts, wch was or word
that Day ; wherefore if I may begg it as a favor from you I most earnestly
beseech you if I may do it wthout offence that it may be soe, & if you thinke
not fitt to have it as I offer, you may alter it as you see Cause, only I doe
thinke I may truely say it wil be verie thankfully acknowledged by me, if
you will spare the having my Effigies in it.
The Gentlemans paynes & trouble hither have been verie great, & I shall
make it my second suite unto you that you will please to Conferr upon him
that imploym' in yor service wch Nicholas Briott had before him, indeed the
man is ingenious and worthie of incouragem' . I may not presume much,
but if at my request & for my sake he may obteyne this favor, I shall putt
it upon the accompt of my obligacons woh are not a few, & I hope shal be
found readie gratefully to acknowledge & to approve myself,
Gentl.
Yor most reall serv*,
0. Cromwell.Edinburgh, 4th
of Feb. 1650.
In the original, Gough says that the name of Nicholas Briot is inserted
in another hand.
4 Humismafa; ©rum&tjlliaita;.
This letter is also printed in Appendix ii. pp. 234, 235, vol. ii. of " The
Origin and Services of the Coldstream Guards. By Colonel Mac Kinnon. "
2 vols, 8vo, London 1833. It will also be found, with the spelling and punc-
tuation modernized, in Mr. Carlyle's Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell,
vol. ii. pp. 109, 110, of the 1st edition, 1845. Both are taken from the above
mentioned Life by Harris.
As we shall presently see when we come to the description of the medals,
Oliver's suggestions concerning their design were all carried out, with the
exception that the Parliament were resolved to have his bust upon them.
The House of Commons sitting, a view of the Army in the Battle, with the
word of the day The Lord of Hosts, are all there, in addition to a life-like
portrait of the General. His recommendation of Simon to the place of Briot,
was also adopted.
Nicholas Briot was a foreign artist, a native of Lorraine, and sometime
Graver-general of the Monies in France. Quitting that kingdom in disgust
at the treatment he received, he offered his services to King Charles I., whoimmediately gave him great encouragement. Charles established him in the
Mint at the Tower in 1628, and afterwards granted to him, upon the 27th
of January, 1633, the office of one of the Chief Engravers of the Irons for
the Mint in the Tower of London, during pleasure. See Euding's Annals
of the Coinage, 3rd edition 1840, vol. i. page 385, and Hawkins's Silver Coins
of England, 1811, p. 164. Mr. Carlyle remarks "We may subjoin, rather
than cancel, the following authentic particulars. In the Commons Journals
of 20th August, 1642, it is :' Ordered, That the Earl of Warwick,' now Ad-
miral of our Fleet, ' be desired that Monsieur Bryatt may have delivery of
his wearing apparel ; and all his other goods stayed at Scarborough, not be-
longing to Minting and Coining of Monies.'—This Nicholas Briot, or Bryatt,
then, must have been Chief Engraver for the Mint at the beginning of the
Civil Wars. We perceive, he has gone to the King northward ; but is here
stopt at Scarborough, with all his baggage, by Warwick the Lord HighAdmiral ; and is to get away. What became of him afterwards, or what washis history before, no man and hardly any Dilettante knows."
—
Letters andSpeeches of Oliver Cromwell, 1st edition 1845, vol. ii. pp. 110, 111.
However, Horace Walpole, in his Anecdotes of Painting, makes the
following statement, on what authority we do not know, though to judge by
$$t ^xuiIkv nivalis. 5
the passage just quoted from the Commons Journals, it seems extremely
probable :— " Briot returned to France about 1642, having formed that
excellent scholar Thomas Simon." See Horace Walpole's Works, edition of
1798, vol. iii. page 179. George Vertue, in his Works of Thomas Simon,
1st edition 1753, pp. 60, 61, says that Briot returned to France in 1646,
but the last figure is probably a misprint, as Briot appears to have gone to
France from Scarborough in 1642.
To return to the Dunbar Medals. Mr. Carlyle mentions " an Order, in
favour of one whose name has not reached the Clerk, and is now indicated
only by stars, That the Council of State shall pay him for ' making the
Statue of the General,'— doubtless this Medal or Effigies of the General
;
the name indicated by stars being again that of Symonds. The Order, we
observe, has the same date as the present Letter ( Commons Journals, 4 Feb-
ruary, 1650-1 )." See Letters and Speeches of Oliver Crom/cell, 1st edition
1845, vol. ii. page 111.
It is now time that we should give the reader some idea of the Medals
themselves. There are three varieties : one of a large size with a design on
both obverse and reverse ; a second smaller in size with both obverse and
reverse ; and a third the same size as the second, but with a plain reverse.
Medal No. I.—Obverse, a profile bust of the General, Oliver Cromwell,
to the left, bare-headed, and in armour with slight drapery. Under the
shoulder is the artist's name in small letters, ti-io. simon. he., for " Thomas
Simon fecit." On either side of the bust a view of the Battle of Dunbar is
seen in the distance. The legend over the head
—
T™BAT• THE LORD OF HOSTS . T™6.
Eeverse, a view of the House of Commons sitting. No legend or inscription
on this side. Oval, size L35 by l'l inches.
This Medal no. 1 is rather common in silver, and sometimes occurs in
copper ; there is a proof in the British Museum, struck from the same dies
upon a circular piece of lead L75 inches diameter.
Bepresentations, more or less accurate, will be found engraved in
—
J. Evelyn's Discourse of Medals, 1697, page 117 ( but there is an engraver's
error of ' 13 ' for ' Y. 3.' on the obverse ), Van Loon's Histoire Metallique
des Pays-Bas, 1732, vol. ii. p. 356, G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon,
1753, plate xii. A, The Medallic History of England, 1790, plate xxii. 3,
6 gunmntafa; SrflrafosIIisna.
Colonel Mac Kinnon's Origin and Services of the Coldstream Guards, 1833,
vol. i. plate A, Thomas Carter's Medals ofthe British Army, 1861, div. ii. p. 4,
and by J. Hulett on a separate plate about the middle of the last century.
Vertue remarks that the bust on this medal has a great resemblance to
a portrait of Oliver by Walker, done about the same time. Horace Walpole,
in his Anecdotes of Painting, thus mentions this artist, "Eobert Walker, a
portrait painter, contemporary with Vandyck, but most remarkable for being
the principal painter employed by Cromwell, whose picture he drew more
than once."— Works, 1798, vol. iii. p. 278. Walpole then enumerates four
of these pictures, and their possessors.
The obverse legend gives the " word of the day," as Oliver mentions in
his Edinburgh letter printed above, and also in the long letter giving the
account of the Battle :" The enemies word was ' the Covenant,' which it had
been for divers dayes. Ours, ' the Lord of Hosts.' "— See Letter to the
Hon. W. Lenthall, 4th September, 1650.
The representation of the House of Commons on the reverse, is a minute
reproduction of the design, by the same artist Thomas Simon, on the Great
Seal of the Parliament 1648, and also on the Great Seal of England 1651.
The small size of the numerous figures on this medal is very extraordinary,
but much more so on our next medal, No. II., which is, as will be seen,
considerably smaller.
In the first edition of the Works of Thomas Simon, 1753, Vertue says
in a note on page 13, that the die of the large Dunbar Medal, No. I., was
kept in the Cromwell family, for on pulling down a house at Hursley, Hants,
which was once theirs, this die was found in the walls. In the second edition,
1780, of the same book, we read that the Seal of the Parliament of the Com-
monwealth of England was also found there. Vertue, who saw it in 1741,
supposed it to be the very seal which Oliver took from the Parliament.
However this may be, we have now before us "a curious pamphlet,
which supplies some valuable information relative to the history of the dies.
It is entitled Narrative relating to the real embalmed Head of Oliver Crom-
well, now exhibiting in Mead-Court in Old Bond-Street, 1799: Pages 14 to
20 are explanatory of the original dies of the Dunbar Medals, which were
exhibited at the same time and place. We will give the account of their
discovery exactly as printed on pages 1 9 and 20 of the pamphlet
—
"Of the two dyes now exhibited and here spoken of, the accurate and
spirited expression of parts so uncommonly minute, the singular beauty of
the heads, and their exact likeness both to the original, and to each other
( of which latter felicity, it has been asserted that there is no equal instance
in the history of this art) sufficiently prove their authenticity ; it only remains
to say, that they were found, near fifty years ago, by Mr. Thomas Gardner,
comptroller of the salt-works at Southwold in Suffolk, in the shop of a black-
smith at that place, who asserted that he, or his father, had purchased them
(with other articles of iron work) out of a house at Southwold that had
belonged to the protector Richard. Vertue's account of their having been
found at Hursley may therefore be erroneous ; but it is not at all material
to the subject. This unlucky fellow, wholly ignorant of the nature and value
of those exquisite monuments both of art and of the English history, had al-
ready appropriated the reverse of the lesser dye, to make one of those steel
instruments with which iron is divided on the anvil. Mr. Gardner instantly
rescued all the parts which remained ; and on one of his annual jouriiies to
London, presented them to Mr. Cox, on condition that the latter should
occasionally furnish him with impressions from them. Mi'. Gardner was
then far advanced in years, and died soon after, when but a very few of the
impressions engaged by Mr. Cox had been taken ; and it is now more than
twenty years since the dyes were used at all, except for a few impressions
from the remaining obverse side of the smaller one. It has already been
shewn from Vertue's opinion that these medals exhibit the best likenesses of
Cromwell, that have ever been obtained in this mode of imitation.
" The late Mr. Pingo, engraver to the mint, out of a generous regard
to the arts, undertook to inclose both parts of the larger dye, at his own
expence, in a strong iron frame, in order to its greater safety, and better
preservation ; and it was done accordingly, in the manner in which it now
appears."
We consider that many of the silver specimens of Medal No. I., that are
now in existence, are original impressions, struck in 1650, and worn by
some of the Army. We have, however, seen others, which appear to have
been struck after the discovery of the die by Mr. Gardner, as mentioned in
the above extract. They are distinguished by flaws or cracks on either side,
probably on account of age and decay in the die.
8 fjttraijsmats ©uffrafoilliatts.
Medal No. //.—Obverse and reverse exactly similar to the large Medal,
No. I., being an accurate and beautiful reduction of it, by the same artist.
The name under the shoulder is, however, abbreviated into t.simon.f., and
the size is 1 inch by -875 of an inch.
This Medal is extremely rare, for we know of only one specimen in gold
and one in copper. They are both in the collection at the British Museum.
The copper impression is apparently an original artist's proof ; but the gold
one has a loop for suspension, and was, we consider, intended to be worn by
some officer of high rank in the army, if not actually so worn.
Eepresentations will be found engraved in : George Vertue's Works of
Thomas Simon, 1753, plate xii., and The Medallic History of England, 1790,
plate xxii. 4.
Medal No. III.—This is merely the obverse side of No. II., struck from
the same die, but the reverse is left quite plain, without any impression ; size,
the same as the preceding medal.
It is common both in silver and in copper. Two specimens in each metal
are preserved in our own cabinet.
We have carefully examined a great many specimens of this medal with
the obverse only, and we find that they are all struck from the same die, and
when the die was in the same condition. Now the gold impression of No. II.
has the obverse also struck from the same die, but a great difference is to be
remarked. When the gold one was struck, in 1650, the die was new, and the
consequence is a perfect impression, with all the details and letters of the in-
scription quite sharp and clear, and without any cracks or flaws. But on
the other hand, all the medals in silver and copper with the obverse only
( No. III.) have several slight cracks, and imperfections in the letters of the
legend. This is especially observable in the word "septem". No specimens
have a loop for suspension, or any other contrivance for wearing it, therefore
none of them probably were worn by the army.
These facts point to but one conclusion—that all the copies of No. III.
Medal were struck after the discovery of the die by Mr. Gardner about the
year 1750. The reason moreover, why none of them have the reverse, is
supplied by the fact of the destruction of the reverse side of the smaller die
by the blacksmith, as described in the extract on the preceding page. The
time during which the obverse die had lain by, had corroded and otherwise
injured it, and thus we have the cracks and other imperfections on the more
recently struck impressions accounted for.
In concluding our History of the Dunbar Medals, we may submit to
the reader's consideration our final conviction that the only impressions
struck at the time and worn by the Parliament's army, were some of the
large silver ones ( No. I.) and the small gold one ( No. II ). All other
specimens, except perhaps the lead and copper proofs of Nos. I. and II.,
have been struck in modern times since the discovery of the dies. The
large silver ones were most likely given to the greater part of the army
and the gold medals only to those high in command.
THE « LOED GENEEAL " MEDAL.
Probably some short time after the completion of the Dunbar Medals,
and during the year 1651, Thomas Simon executed that beautifid work of
art—his medal of Oliver Cromwell as Lord General of the Army. On the
26th of June 1650, was passed an Act of Parliament appointing "That
Oliver Cromwell, Esquire, be constituted Captain-General and Commander-
in-Chief of all the Forces raised and to be raised by authority of Parliament
within the Commonwealth of England." See Journals of the House of
Commons, 26th June, 1650.
" The Lord Fairfax, being pleased this day (June 26) to lay down his
commission, it was received by the Parliament, who thereupon voted the
Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland to be General of their forces in Enqland, &c."
From the newspaper, Mercurius Politicus, June 20 to 27, 1650, quoted in
Cromwelliana, page 82.
Vertue rightly places this medal next in order after those for Dunbar,
but the author of the Medallic History of England supposes it to be the first
of Cromwell. Now from the letter of the 4th of February 1650-1, printed
above on page 3, we perceive that Simon was sent a very difficult and dan-
gerous journey, all the way from London to Edinburgh, expressly to draw
the portrait of Oliver. We may therefore ask, if Cromwell had already sat
to Simon, and if Simon had already executed a medal with his bust, would
io guraiumaU ©tmrrafotlUaita.
the Official Medallist have been sent so long and expensive a journey merely
to draw the Lord General's portrait over again ? We certainly think not,
Further, it is very probable that, seeing his success with the Dunbar Medal,
Cromwell subsequently, in 1651, gave Simon a special order to execute his
portrait on a medal for himself, as many other persons of position also did
about the same time. For instance, Simon, in pursuance of private orders,
made medals of the Speaker William Lenthall, the Secretary Thutioe, the
Clerk of the Parliament Henry Scobell, Mr. and Mrs. Cleypole, [Dorcas
Brabazon, and several others. In the letter printed on page 3, we also per-
ceive Cromwell's high opinion of the artist :" indeed the man is ingenious,
and worthie of incouragement," and it was not Oliver's custom to use any
superfluous words.
This Medal may be described as follows : Obverse, three-quarter-face
bust of Oliver Cromwell to the right, in armour, and draped. This head is
a very fine likeness and in high relief. Legend— oil. cromwel. milit.
parl. dvx. GEN. (Oliver Cromwell, Lord General ofthe Parliament's Forces.)
The Eeverse is quite plain. The design is oval, size l-2 by 1*1 inches.
All the original impressions struck in Cromwell's time are impressed
upon a circular piece of metal 1 "4 inches in diameter. They are extremely
rare, one in gold is in the possession of the Eev. J. H. Marsden ; a silver
and a copper specimen are in the British Museum. It appears that the die
very soon cracked near the edge. On the silver impression in the British
Museum, a slight crack is just visible at the top, running through the let-
ters el. mil., in the words CROMWEL. MILIT. The copper specimen in the
same cabinet shows this piece of the die broken quite off, thus destroying
a small portion of the design. Probably the occurrence of this accident
hindered the medallist, Simon, from striking any more copies, for an
extremely small number are now known.
George Vertue says on page 14 of his 1st edition, " This Dye, 'tis said,
was conveyed into Holland, about thirty years since, and many were struck
off in silver, &c. And tho' crack'd, the Medal sold for an high price here."
This statement of Vertue was published in 1753, which brings the date of
the striking of the new impressions to about 1723.
One of these more recently struck copies is in the Author's cabinet.
It is a silver medal, of an oval shape, but only the exact size of the design,
1*2 by 1*1 inches, and it has the flaw showing where the edge of the die
was broken. The medal exhibits signs of the decay in the die through lying
by during the period 1651 to 1723, and many of the details are not nearly
so sharp as in the original impressions.
The reader may easily distinguish them, by remembering that the
original medals are circular and 1 '4 inches in diameter ; and that the
modern impressions, struck from the old die about 1723, are oval, and 1-2
by 1-1 inches in size.
The " Lord General " Medal is engraved in G. Vertue's Works of
Thomas Simon, 1753, plate xii. b, and in The Medallic History ofEngland,
1790, plate xxii. 2.
It was on the anniversary of Cromwell's great victory at Dunbar, in the
following year, that the crowning Battle of Worcester was fought— 3rd of
September, 1651. "He here sheaths his war-sword ; with that, it is not
his Order from the Great Captain that he fight any more." See Thomas
Carlyle's Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, 1st edition, vol. i. p. 149.
We believe that it was after the Lord General's arrival in London, and
during the latter part of the year 1651, or possibly in 1652, that this Medal
was struck ; our account of which may be appropriately concluded by the
following lines upon these ever memorable events
—
SONNET to the Lord General Cromwell
Written by John Milton, May 16th, 1652.
Cromwell, our chief of men, who through a cloud
Not of war only, but detractions rude,
Guided by faith and matchless fortitude,
To peace and truth thy glorious way hast plough'd,
And on the neck of crowned Fortune proudHast rear'd God's trophies, and his work pursued
;
While Darwen stream, with blood of Scots imbrued,And Dunbar field resounds thy praises loud,
And Worcester's laureat wreath. Yet much remainsTo conquer still ; Peace hath her victories
No less renown'd than War ; new foes arise
Threat'ning to bind our souls with secular chains :
Help us to save free conscience from the pawOf hireling wolves, whose Gospel is their maw.
12 fumt5ma!a Qturnktllnv*.
THE PATTEEN FABTHING OF 1651.
We now come to a perplexing point in the History of Oliver Cromwell.
There exists a pattern for a Copper Farthing, which may be thus described :
Obverse, a badly executed bust of Oliver in profile to the left, laureate,
and with drapery round the neck. Legend— OLIVER. PRO. ENG. SCO & IRE.
A mullet or five-pointed star over the head. Eeverse, a garnished and
crowned shield with the arms thus— Quarterly, 1st and 4th, St. George's
cross for England ; 2nd, St. Andrew's cross for Scotland ; 3rd, a harp for
Ireland. On an escutcheon of pretence, a lion rampant, the family arms
of Cromwell. Legend— convenient change, with a mullet at the end of
each of these words. The date 1651 above the arms. The edge of the coin
is quite plain. Copper, very rare, the only specimen that we have seen is
in the British Museum.
It is engraved in Thomas Snelling's View of the Copper Coin and Coin-
age of England, plate 6, no. 9 ; and in Folkes's and Euding's plates of the
Silver Coins of England, plate xxxii., no. 10.
An author, one of the first who described this curious coin, remarks
that " If there is no mistake in this date, we should suspect the protector-
ship had been long concerted before it was effected." See Thomas Snelling's
View of the Copper Coin and Coinage of England, folio, London 1766, p. 33.
The Eev. Eogers Euding adopts the same view of the case, he says " It is
remarkable that those ( farthings ) with the date 1651 have the image and
superscription of Cromwell, as protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland,
although he was not publicly invested with that title until the 1 6th of De-
cember 1653. If therefore there be no mistake in the above date of 1651,
his assumption of the protectorship must have been determined upon some
time before it was actually effected."
—
Annals of the Coinage, 3rd edit. i. 413.
Looking at this question in a numismatic point of view, we have not
the slightest doubt that the date of 1651 is really either a mistake, or a
wrong date placed on the coin wilfully, but for what purpose cannot now be
discovered. In the first place, the design of this farthing is clearly the same
as Simon's crown of the Protector, dated 1'658, and it is not very likely
that Simon himself would copy the types of the whole of his celebrated
coinage of 1656 and 1658 from an obscure pattern farthing by an unknown
'§« H a H $ r- n f aHijing b! 1051. 13
artist. The drawing and execution of it are both very bad, and could never
be attributed to such an artist as Simon, and therefore Simon certainly did
not reproduce Ms own design by copying this farthing, although one of the
two coins is evidently copied from the other. In the next place, it bears
the arms of the Protectorate, exactly as they first appeared upon the Great
Seal made by Thomas Simon upon Oliver's Inauguration as Lord Protector,
16th December, 1653. The arms upon the Commonwealth's coins current
in 1651 are only the St. George's cross and the Irish harp.
The only plausible explanation of this date of 1651 is then, as we have
said before, that it is a false date ; the whole design of the farthing being
copied, with the exception of the inscriptions, from Simon's silver crown of
1658, though done by a very inferior hand. The bust on the obverse looks
the same way, has the same laurel wreath, and also the same drapery. As
to the reverse, the arms and shape of the shield and the form of the crown,
are exactly similar. From this we conclude that the 1651 farthing was a
private pattern, made probably in the year 1658. The proper place for it
in our work would therefore be under the latter year, but we considered
that our readers might be able to find this piece more readily under the old
date of 1651.
ARMS OF THE PROTECTORATE
FROM THE INAUGURATION OF OLIVER CEOMWELL
AS LORD PROTECTOR, 16th DECEMBER, 1653,
TO THE END OF THE YEAR 1655.
CHAPTEE II.
THE INAUGURATION MEDAL.
" Heaven, that hath placed this island to give law,
To balance Europe, and her states to awe,In this conjunction doth on Britain smile :
The greatest leader, and the greatest isle !
"
So sings Edmund Waller in the ablest of his productions, A Panegyric to
my Lord Protector, of the present Greatness, and joint Interest, of Ms
Highness, and this Nation, written about 1654.
It is in this position of " the greatest leader of the greatest isle," that
we have now to record Cromwell's Medallic History : as " Lord Protector
of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the Dominions thereunto belonging."
For a graphic account of his appearance at the Installation in Westminster
Hall, and other important matters, the reader should peruse the passage in
Carlyle's Letters and Speeches of Olirer Cromwell, 1st edition, 1845, vol. ii.
pp. 226 et seqq. See also the contemporary newspaper report of the cere-
mony, reprinted in Cromurlliana, pp. 130, 131.
We give below, for the benefit of the curious reader, a faithful copy of
the original Proclamation, taken from a rare Collection of Ordinances, Pro-
clamations, 8fc, from Pec. 16, 1653, to Sep. 3, 1654 ; small folio, London,
1654. One of the original printed broadsides is exhibited in Case XII. No. 24
of the King's Library, British Museum.
" BY THE COUNSEL.
1XTHEKEAS the late Parlament dissolving themselves, and resigning
i ? their Powers and Authorities, The Government of the Commonwealth
of England, Scotland, and Ireland, by a Lord Protector, and Successive
Triennial Parlaments, is now established ; And whereas Oliver Cromwel,
Captain-General of all the Forces of this Commonwealth, is declared Lord
Protector of the said Nations, and hath accepted thereof : We have there-
fore thought it necessary ( as we hereby do ) to make publication of the
Premisses, and strictly to Charge and Command all, and every person and
persons, of what quality and condition soever, in any of the said three Na-
tions, to take notice hereof, and to conform and submit themselves to the
18 fhtraisnufa £i; flntbnlliaiu.
Government so established. And all Sheriffs, Majors, Bayliffs. and other
Publike Ministers, and Officers, whom this may concern, are required to
cause this Proclamation to be forthwith published in their respective Coun-
ties, Cities, Corporations, and Market-Towns, To the end none may have
cause to pretend ignorance in this behalf.
Given at White-Hall, this sixteenth day of December, 1653. "
Thomas Simon executed one of his finest medals in commemoration of
this auspicious event. The original ( struck ) impressions are among the
rarest of Cromwell's Medals, though inferior casts in silver not unfrequently
occur at the present day.
The Inauguration Medal may be thus described : Obverse, profile
bust of Oliver Cromwell, bare-headed, to the left, in armour and draped.
Under the shoulder is the artist's name in small letters, sthox". p for "Thomas
Simon fecit." Legend— oltvervs . dei . gea . retpyb . axglle . sco . et .
bib . & . protector. ( Oliver, by the grace of God, Protector of the Common-wealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, etc.) Eeverse, a lion sejant,
crowned with a wreath of laurel, and holding a shield bearing the arms of
the Protectorate : Quarterly, 1st and 4th, St. George's cross for England;
2nd, St. Andrew's cross for Scotland ; 3rd, a harp for Ireland. On an escut-
cheon of pretence, a lion rampant, the family arms of Cromwell. (See ante,
page 13.) Legend, the motto— pax qv^rttvr bello. (Peace is sought by
war. ) A circular medal, size 1-5 inches in diameter.
The design is a beautiful work of art, in high relief, and is executed
in a bold and masterly style combined with the highest finish and delicacy
of workmanship. This medal is extremely rare ; the only examples that we
have seen are one in gold and one in silver, both in the British Museum.
The Inauguration Medal is engraved in— Gregorio Leti"s Vita di 0U-
viero Cromrelc, Amsterdam 1692, vol. ii. p. 316 ; La Vie cVOlivier Cronucel,
Amsterdam 1694, vol. ii., J. Evelyn's Discourse of Medals, 1697, p. 118;
Gerard van Loon's Histoire Mctalliqite des Pai/s-Bas, 1732, vol. ii., p. 367 ;
George Yertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753, plate xii. e e ; The
Jl'dallic History of England, 1790, plate xxii. no. 6 ; and by J. Hulett on
a separate plate about the middle of the last century. In all these repre-
%}jt &mt §ul fin Inglautt. 19
sentations there are errors in the obverse legend. One engraver has put
olivarivs for olivervs, some have repvb. instead of reipvb., and all the
engravers have omitted the " &."
THE GREAT SEAL FOR ENGLAND.
When Oliver Cromwell became Lord Protector, upon the 16th Decem-
ber 1653, a Great Seal for England was made according to orders by Thomas
Simon. The following is a description of it
—
Seal or Obverse, the Protector on horseback to the left, in full armour,
bare-headed, and with his sword in its sheath at his side. He holds a baton
or truncheon in his right hand, and in his left the horse's bridle. In the
field, to the right, is an oval garnished shield bearing the arms, Quarterly,
1st and 4th, the Cross of St. George ; 2nd, the Saltire of St. Andrew ; 3rd,
the Harp of Ireland ; on an escutcheon of pretence a lion rampant. Under-
neath, in the background, appears a view of the City of London, the River
Thames, and London Bridge. Legend— olivarivs . bei . gra . reip . ang-
LI2E . scotle . et . HiBERNi^i . &c. protector. ( Oliver, by the grace of God,
Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, etc. )
Counter-seal or Reverse, a square garnished shield bearing— Quarterly
of four, 1st and 4th, the Cross of St. George ; 2nd, the Saltire of St. Andrew
;
3rd, the Harp of Ireland ; over all, on an Inescutcheon, a Lion rampant, the
paternal arms of Cromwell. The shield is surmounted by the royal helmet,
ensigned with the royal crown, supporting the Crest of England— a Lion
statant-guardant, Imperially crowned. Supporters— Dexter, a Lion guard-
ant crowned ; Sinister, a Dragon. Beneath the shield is the Motto— pax
QViERiTVR bello (Peace is sought by war), upon an ornamented label.
Above the shield, and behind the helmet, is an elaborate mantling.
Legend— magnvm . sigillvm . reipvb : anglle . scotle . et . hibernljE &c.
( Great Seal of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, etc.
)
Both sides of the Seal are surrounded with a closely woven oak wreath.
Size, 5-75 inches in diameter.
20 fumtsnuta £t-flrafo*lIianE.
THE PRIVY SEAL.
After the Great Seal, the Privy Seal of the Protector next demands a
notice. The design is circular, 2-5 inches in diameter, on one side only,
and is also the work of Thomas Simon. In the centre are the Arms, Crest,
Supporters, and Motto, exactly as upon the Great Seal. They are encircled
by the legend olwar . dbi . gra . reipvb . anglle . scoti^) . et . hibernle .
& . protector. Round the edge is a closely woven wreath of oak leaves.
A representation of this seal is engraved by George Vertue upon plate
xxxviii. of his account of the Works of Thomas Simon. It is copied from
" the Impression of the Original Dye in Steel, which was in the Possession
of Thomas Freman of Chelmsford, in this County of Essex, Gent, untill the
Year 1749 ; to whose Hands it came by Descent, from his Ancestor, Keeper
of this Seal, and is now in the Possession of his Son Thomas Freman of
Chelmsford aforesaid ; who favour'd me with this Opportunity to oblige
the Publick."
—
Vertue, 1st edition, 1753, page 65.
THE ORDINANCE OF TREASONS.
The first act of the new government concerning the Coinage, and the
next occurrence in the order of time relating to the Numismatic History
of the Protector, was the publication of an Ordinance by his Highness and
his Council, declaring what offences should be adjudged High Treason,
19th January, 1653-54. The part relating to the counterfeiting and clip-
ping of the current coin is, as the Rev. Rogers Ruding remarks, " nearly in
the same terms as the act of 1649, chapter the 44th."
—
Annals of the Coinage,
3rd edition, vol. i. page 418.
We reprint this portion from the same book which we have quoted
above for the Proclamation : the Collection of Ordinances, Proclamations, 8fc,
from Dec. 16, 1653, to Sep. 3, 1654, (page 29.)
"An Ordinance declaring that the Offences herein mentioned, and no other, shall
be adjudged High Treason itithin the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and
Ireland, and the Dominions thereunto belonging.
" Or if any person or persons shall counterfeit the money of this Com-
monwealth, or shall bring any fals money into this Land, either counterfeit
or other, like to the money of this Commonwealth (knowing such money to
be fals ) to the intent to Merchandize, or otherwise ; Or if any person or
persons shall hereafter falsly forge or counterfeit any such kinde of Coyn,
either of Gold or Silver, which is not the proper Coyn of this Commonwealth,
and yet is or shall bee current within the same ; Or shall bring from the
parts beyond the Seas into. this Commonwealth, or into any the Dominions
of the same, any such fals or counterfeit Coyn of money being current within
this Commonwealth, as is abovesaid (knowing the said money to be fals and
counterfeit . to the intent to utter or make payment with the same, within
this Commonwealth, by Merchandize or otherwise ; Or if any person or
persons shall Impair, Diminish, Falsifie, Clip, Wash, Eound, File, Scale or
lighten for wicked lucre or gains sake any the proper moneys of this Com-
monwealth, or of the Dominions thereof, or of the moneys or Coyns of any
other place allowed or suffered to be current within this Commonwealth, or
the Dominions thereof ; Then all and every the Offences abovementioned
shall be and are hereby deemed, ordained and adjudged to bee high Treason
;
And the Offenders therein, and their counsellors, procurers, aiders and abet-
ters, being convicted according to the Laws of this Nation of any of the said
Offences, shall be and are hereby deemed and adjudged to be Traytors against
this Commonwealth, and shall suffer and have such pains of death, and incur
such forfeitures, as in case of high Treason is used and ordained.
" Provided always, That neither this Ordinance, nor any thing therein
contained as touching the moneys and Coyns aforesaid, nor any attainder
of any person or persons for the same, shall in any wise be adjudged to
make any corruption of blood to any the heir or heirs of any such Offendor
or Offendors, nor to make the wife of any. such Offendors to lose or forfeit
her Dower of or in any Lands, Tenements, or Hereditaments, or her Title,
Action, or Interest in or to the same.
22 lumisraaia (EiDrafotlliana.
" Thursday the 19. of January, 1653.
" Ordered by His Highness the Lord Protector, and His Counsel,
" That this Ordinance be forthwith Printed and Published.
" Hen. Scobell, Clerk of the Counsel."
In Scobell's Acts, etc., folio, London 1658, on page 278, the title only
of this Ordinance is given, thus :
—
" Anno 1653. Cap. 8. An Enumeration of several Offences, which
shall be taken and adjudged to be Treason. 19 January, 1653."
THE IRISH PETITION.
On the 16th of February, 1653-54, the Council in Ireland addressed
the Lord Protector, in the following petition, representing the deplorable
state of the current coin in Ireland, and praying for the erection of a mint
at Dublin :
—
" To his Highness the Lord Protector.
" Feb. 16, 1653,
" May it please your highness,
" The inclosed is a coppie of a letter sent in July last to the committee
at Whitehall for Irish affairs, representing the necessity of a mint in this
country, but they being through multiplicity of business hindered, and
nothing since effected in it, we have taken the boldness humbly to apply
our selves to your highness, in regard the inconvenience which we find to
have happened to your affaires here since our first application for a power
to coine the forreigne money into English (for the reasons formerly sett
forth) is soe great, and that sort of money generally soe falsifyed, that the
stock of the countrey (in money) is conceived to be detrimented thereby
above one third part, there being scarce any coine now left but foreigne,
and that for the most part course Peru pieces. The English money (and
for want of that ) the best sort of Spanish being bought up by merchants
to make their returns into England, for want of commodities in barter to
exchange here. A proof of the value of which course Peru hath, by our
order, been lately made, by which it did appear that six hundred thirty-
five pounds of Peru money, at the rate of foure shillings and six pence each
piece (being the rate now currant) melted down, did yield in sterling
money, upon an exact assay thereof, but foure hundred and one pounds,
soe that two hundred thirty and three pounds was lost in that small parcell
at the rates now usuall ; beside this losse in the course Peru, we fmde, by
the relation of your officers here intrusted with the receipts of the revenue,
that very much of the forreigne money, which runne in payment, is alto-
gether brass and counterfeit upon the whole, therefore we humbly conceive,
that unlesse some speedy course be taken to call in all base forreigne
moneys, and reduce it into English coine, there will be in a short time noe
money left to pay your forces, or for necessary exchange amongst the peo-
ple, but counterfeit and bad money, and consequently your affairs here will
unavoidably fall into disorder : all which we conceive our duty to represent
to your consideration, to doe therein as in your highness prudence shall be
thought fitt, and are, fyc."
(Enclosure.)
" To the committee for Irish affairs in England.
"July 15, 1653. Some few monthes since, we took the boldness to
represent to the councell the pressing necessities of a mint to be appointed
in this country, by reason of the great want of the small English money;
for finding it adviseable, as the only means appearing unto us, to prevent
the abuse of English coyne, in clipping and counterfeiting of it, to call in
all the bad and clipped money, and to forbid the currency of it in payment
unlesse by weight. The greatest part of the English money proving bad
and clipped, small payments could not easily be made either to the soul-
diers, or unto others, where by much distraction was occasioned. This our
desire was transmitted to the Parliament, who were pleased to make an
order for one hundred thousand pounds to be coyned in Ireland, refering it
back to the councell of state for settling it, in the progress and debate of
which there appearing some difficulty about sending persons over out of
England for it, and that way there proposed amounting to an excessive
charge, the inclosed expedient was tendered to us by some inhabitants of
this towne, who are esteemed honest knowing men, which comeing to the
council but a few days before the late change, we againe humbly offer to
24 j$urai$raaia d^orafojlliaita.
your consideration, being the more induced at this season to doe it by rea-
son of very much corruption and abasement discovered every day to grow
more and more, 8fc. To prevent which we know not a more probable
expedient than the speedy erecting of a mint here, 8fc."
See James Simon's Essay on Irish Coins, quarto, Dublin 1 749, Appendix
Nos. LI. and XLIX., where these documents are transcribed- from the Coun-
cil office booh, A. 90. p. 616, and p. 516.
The necessity for the erection of a mint in Dublin was also strongly
urged by General Fleetwood in a letter to Secretary Thurloe, dated upon
the same day as the above Petition. The following is an extract :
—
- "Sir,
I have one thinge more to adde, that the coyne heere is
exceedingly debased and corrupted, and this countrie will be ruined, if not
tymely prevented. I must therefore entreate your speciall assistance in pro-
cureing us a minte here, according to the letter to my lord protector from
the commissioners heere. Excuse this trouble from your very affectionate
friend and servant,
"Charles Fleetwood."
"Dublin, 16 Febr. 1653."
See page 94 vol. ii. of A Collection of the State Papers of John Thurloe,
London 1742, 7 vols, folio.
We shall print another Petition to His Highness on the same subject
under the year 1656; but, although it was thus frequently pressed, we donot find that this request was ever granted.
MEDALS OF CKOMWELL AND FAIRFAX,
We have now to describe two very curious and interesting medals, one
made in England, and the other in Holland, but both bearing on the
obverse the head of Oliver Cromwell, and on the reverse that of General
Sir Thomas Fairfax.
The first medal of Cromwell and Fairfax ( see our plate ii. no. 1 ) has
on the Obverse, a profile bust of Oliver Cromwell, bare-headed, to the left,
and draped. Legend— olivar . d . gr . ang . sco . HIB . & . peot. ( Oliver,
by the grace of God, Protector of England, Scotland, Ireland, etc. )
Reverse, a profile bust of General Sir Thomas ( afterwards Lord ) Fairfax,
bare-headed, with long hair, to the left. He wears a large falling collar, a
cuirass, and a mantle fastened on his shoulder, below which appear t. s. f.
( for " Thomas Simon fecit " ) in very minute letters. Legend— genneral
Fairfax. A circular medal, size 1*2 inches in diameter.
Our illustration is taken from a copper specimen in the British
Museum. The only other that we have heard of as at present existing, is
said to be a silver impression, in the Hunterian Collection at the Glasgow
University. We have not yet— July 1873— been able to verify this, since
the coins and medals are packed away in the bank cellars, during the
removal of the University to new buildings. However, through the courtesy
of Dr. John Young, Keeper of the Hunterian Museum, we hope to be able
to give further particulars of it in the Appendix at the end of this work.
A silver specimen, probably the Hunterian, " was shewn by Mr. Vertue" at
the Antiquary Society, 1745, from the collection of Commissioner Fairfax."
See G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 2nd edition, 1780, page 12.
It is engraved in— George Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753,
plate xi. ll ; and The Medattk History of England, 1790, plate xxii. no. 1.
The head of Oliver on this medal is identical with the head of his
equestrian figure upon the English Great Seal, and is in good relief. The
bust on the reverse is from the same die as that on an unpublished silver
medal of Sir Thomas Fairfax in the British Museum. For the sake of
comparison a representation of it is given on plate ii. no. 2. This latter
medal is, in all probability the only one of Sir Thomas Fairfax ever exe-
cuted by Thomas Simon. The type and inscriptions are copied' from the
26 fumiismafa ©namfoelliainr.
oval medals, dated 1645, which are common, and clearly by a different hand
than Simon's ( see Verhie, plate xi. I and K ). It is circular, size 1 -2 inches
in diameter, and very faintly struck on a thin piece of silver. Obverse, bust
as on No. 1, but the artist's initials are not under the shoulder. Legend
—
tho . FAIRFAX . miles . milit . parli . dvx . gener. A rose at the commence-
ment of this legend. Eeverse, the word mervisti in the centre, with POST.
HAC . meliora around it. In the Appendix, page 76, of the 2nd edition of
Vertue it is said that there was an impression of the obverse of this medal
on a thin piece of silver in the Hunterian Collection. A crack in the die
was undoubtedly the cause of the artist's proceeding no further with this
piece than to strike a few trial proofs. It was probably intended to be a
presentation medal for the army, like the oval medals previously mentioned,
and must have been engraved in the period between the Battle of Naseby,
1645, and Fairfax's resignation of the post of Lord General in 1650.
The life of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, the celebrated Parliamentary
general, is too well known to need the repetition of any particulars of it
here. Suffice it for us to remark that he possessed cultivated tastes, was a
warm friend to learning, and was himself not undistinguished as an author.
He had a great love for English Antiquities, and made, among other collec-
tions, one of coins and medals, which were purchased by the father of Ealph
Thoresby, the eminent antiquary of Leeds, who lived 1658—1725.
After his resignation of the chief command, already mentioned ( amtea
page 9 ), Lord Fairfax retired to his house at Nun-Appleton in Yorkshire,
where he lived quietly during the Protectorate, not again taking part in
public matters until 1659, when he joined General Monk to assist in the
restoration of Charles II.
With reference to the Cromwell and Fairfax Medal, plate ii. no. 1,
George Vertue says, " These two Heads on one Medal, seem to have been
thus artfully struck, to indicate the Decline of General Fairfax, and the
Uprising of Oliver to the Protectorate.''''— Works of Thomas Simon, 1753,
page 12. This conjecture is certainly without any foundation, for since the
head of Cromwell on the medal in question is taken from a punch of that
on the Great Seal for England, and this Great Seal could not have been
executed before 1653, and was really not made until 1655 ( see our article
(Brflmfotll ani fair-fax fffifcal*. •zt
on Seals at the end of this chapter ), the date of the medal must be after
1654 ; thus it can scarcely indicate the decline of Fairfax, who had resigned
his command in 1650, and had been living in retirement for some years.
The two dies of the obverse and reverse were in our opinion only struck
upon the same blank from a whim of the artist, and both being cracked,
they would only serve for the two or three proofs which now exist, and could
not be used for a finished medal of which a considerable number had to be
struck. Simon apparently took the cracked die of the obverse of Fairfax's
medal, plate ii. no. 2, and joined it to the obverse of an unfinished medal
of Cromwell, the die of which was also cracked, probably in the process of
hardening. The result is the extremely rare proof piece now presented to
the reader's notice, and which also furnishes another example of an uncom-
pleted medal by Thomas Simon being laid aside after the striking of a few
proof impressions, in consequence of a crack appearing in the die : the Lord
G-eneral Medal being the first one described in this work ( antea p. 9.)
The second medal of Cromwell and Fairfax is hitherto unpublished in
this country, and was obligingly pointed out to our notice by M. Renier
Chalon, President of the Royal Numismatic Society at Brussels.
The Obverse bears a head of Cromwell, crowned with a kind of imperial
crown. The head is double, and when reversed there appears that of a demon.
In front of the faces is the word Cuomwel. The legend, in Dutch, is sur-
rounded by two inner circles, and reads— den . een . mens . IS . den . A .
snN dvivel (Ben een mens is den anderen siin duivel ) , meaning "this one
C Cromwell ) is the evil genius of the other ( Fairfax )." Reverse, a similar
28 guraismata iFrflrafojIHaua.
reversible head of Fairfax in a large Puritan's hat, joined to a fool's head
with the cap and bells. In front of the faces, the word farfox. A similar
Dutch legend, also surrounded by two circles, reading— deen . SOT . IS . D .
A . S . gek . (Been sot is den anderen siin gek) , signifying " this simpleton
( Faiifax ) is the other's ( Cromwell's ) fool or dupe." A circular medal,
size 1-5 inches in diameter.
This medal is extremely rare, since we have only heard of two examples,
the finest of which is in the possession of M. le General Meyers, of Anvers.
It is of copper, cast and chased, and was found, in 1825, among the foun-
dations of a house in Maestricht. Another specimen, not so well preserved,
is in the cabinet of the " Bibliotheque Eoyale de Belgique" at Brussels.
The accompanying engraving is taken from a woodcut on page 407,
tome ii. le serie, of the Revue de la Numismatique Beige, 1846, where there
is an article explanatory of it by Al. C. Piot.
This very curious and scurrilous medal was probably the work of one
of the inferior Dutch medallists, who produced so many satirical medals
about this period, and the occasion seems to have been the retirement of
Fairfax and the appointment of Cromwell to be Lord General, on the 26th
June, 1650. However, from the imperial crown upon Cromwell's head one
might imagine that the medal had been made after his assumption of the
Protectorate, unless the artist intended to signify by it that Oliver was
already the chief man in the state.
It will be observed that the design of the reversible heads very much
resembles the common medals that have the Pope's head and the DeviFs
similarly conjoined. The satirical inscriptions, pointing out Fairfax as the
.imbecile tool of Cromwell's superior and more diabolical geniuis, appear
to have reference to some influence which Cromwell was supposed to have
over him, and which ended by Cromwell's succeeding to his post of Lord
General. The Earl of Clarendon, in his History of the Rebellion, refers
to this in the following words :— " Hereupon Cromwell was chosen
general ; which made no alteration in the army ; which he had modelled
to his own mind before, and commanded as absolutelv." Vol. vi., p. 450,
Oxford edition, 1839.
THE COMMONWEALTH COINS.
During the whole of the Protectorates of Oliver and Richard Cromwell,
and even to the year 1660, the Mint continued to coin and issue money with
the Commonwealth's type, as fixed by the Act of Parliament, anno 1649,
cap. 43 ; which enumerates the several denominations thus :
—
" One piece of Gold of the value of Twenty shillings Sterling, to be
called, The Twenty shillings piece, stamped on the one side with the Cross,
and a Palm and Lawrel, with these words, The Commonwealth of England;
and on the other side with the Cross and Harp, with these words, God with
us : One other piece of Gold money of Ten shillings, to be called, The Ten
shillings piece : and one other piece of Gold money of Five shillings, to be
called, The Five shillings piece, with the same Words, Inscriptions, Pictures
and Arms on each side, as the former : And for Silver moneys, pieces of five
shillings, and pieces of two shillings and six pence, and pieces of Twelve
pence, and pieces of Six pence, having the same Words, Inscriptions, Pic-
tures and Arms on each side as the former ; Also pieces of Two pence, and
One peny, having the same Pictures and Arms as the former, without any
Words or Inscriptions ; and the Half peny having on the one side a Cross,
and on the other side a Harp." See Henry Scobell's Collection of Acts and
Ordinances, part ii., page 64.
The following coins, therefore, appropriately receive a space in our
Medallic History of Oliver Cromwell, as bearing the dates of the years
of his Protectorate, viz :— 1653 to 1658.
Gold Twenty-shillings or Broad Pieces. Obverse, a plain shield bearing
St. George's Cross, surrounded by a palm and a laurel branch. Legend
—
the . commonwealth . OF . ENGLAND . ; at the end of which is the mint-
mark, either a sun or an anchor. Reverse, two shields conjoined, one
bearing St. George's cross, and the other the Irish harp. The numerals xx.,
for 20s., the value, above ; the whole being within a beaded inner circle.
Legend— GOD . with . vs . , and the date. Those issued during Oliver's
Protectorate have the dates 1653, 1654, 1656, and 1657, with the mint-
mark of a sun. The full weight of a twenty-shilling piece was 140-4878 grains
Troy ; and the standard of all the gold coins was twenty-two carats of fine
gold to two carats of alloy, or eleven parts fine out of twelve.
30 gumij&maia tomfonlliaita.
Ten-shilling Pieces or Half-broads : exactly similar in type to the twen-
ty-shilling pieces, but having the numeral X., for 10s., instead of xx., above
the shields on the reverse. Dates 1653 and 1654, with mint-mark sun.
Full weight 70-2439 grains.
Fice-shillhuj Pieces : also similar to the two higher denominations, but
with v., for 5s., over the shields on the reverse. Dates 1653 and 1654 with
mint-mark sun, and 1658 with mint-mark anchor. Full weight, 35-1219 grs.
For engravings of the Gold Coins, see Vertue plate ix., Smiling pi. vi.,
and Folkes and Euding pi. xiv.
Silver Croivns : exactly similar in type to the twenty-shilling pieces,
but with v., for 5s., over the shields on the reverse. The dates are 1653,
1654, and 1656, with the sun mint-mark. Weight 464-514 grains. The
standard of all the silver coins was 11 oz. 2 dwts. fine silver to 18dwts.
alloy, or 11-1 parts silver to -9 part alloy.
Half-crowns : same type, but with II. vi., for 2s. Cd., as the value.
Dates 1653, 1654, 1655, and 1656, with the sun mint-mark ; and 1658 with
an anchor as mint-mark. Weight 232-257 grains.
Shillings: same type, but with xn., for 12 d., on the reverse. Dates
1653, 1654, 1655, 1656, and 1657, with sun mint-mark; and 1658 with
anchor mint-mark. Weight 92-9028 grains. The shilling of 1655 in the
British Museum has clearly been altered from one of 1654, although Mr.
Hawkins has not noticed this alteration in his Sikrr Coins of England.
Six-pences : also of the same type,* but with VI., for 6d. Dates 1653,
1654, 1655, 1656, and 1657 with sun mint-mark; and 1658 with anchor
mint-mark. Weight 46-4514 grains.
Half-groats or Two-pences. Obverse, a plain shield bearing St. George's
cross, surrounded by a palm and a laurel branch. Reverse, two shields con-
joined: one bearing St. George's cross, the other the Irish harp. The
numerals II., for 2d., above. No legend or date on either side. Weight
15-4838 grains.
Pennies : exactly similar in type to the half-groats, but with I., for Id.,
above the two shields on the reverse. Weight 7-7419 grains.
Half-pennies. Obverse, a single shield bearing St. George's cross.
Reverse, a single shield bearing the Irish harp. No legends or numerals.
Weight 3-3709 grains.
£jj£ (Eflmra0tifoulih (Biriits. si
For engravings of the Silver Coins, see Vertue plate viii., Smiling
pi. xvi., and Follies and Ending pi. xxxi.
None of the above coins are the work of Thomas Simon, the execution
and design both fall far short of this celebrated artist's known productions.
The types and inscriptions were agreed upon by the House of Commons,
but whether the dies were engraved by John East, the Under Graver, or
not, we have no evidence to show.
It is very probable that most of the silver coins just described, more
especially those dated 1653, 1654, and 1655, were coined out of the Dutch
silver seized in the three ships Sampson, Salvador, and George. It will not
be out of place, therefore, if we here give a short account of the seizure and
disposal of this silver, since it is mentioned in T. Violet's True Narrative,
8fc, as " all the Silver now coyning in the Tower :" the now referring to
August, 1653.
These three Dutch vessels, with several other ships, " came into com-
pany all together from Cadiz" on the 13th October, 1652, and were soon
after brought into the Eiver Thames as prizes. They did not, however,
surrender to the English without some resistance, as was evinced by the
marks of cannon shot in their hulls. On the 8th December, Thomas Violet,
a goldsmith of the city of London, laid before the Council of State a paper
begging for a strict enquiry relative to the three ships— the Sampson, Sal-
vador, and George—which were then awaiting judgment in the Court of
Admiralty. He represented that these were Dutch ships, and that the silver
bullion on board of them was chiefly also the property of merchants of
Amsterdam. If this was the case, the whole of the treasure could be sei-
zed as the property of the enemy, since war had been declared against the
United Provinces on the 9th July, 1652, and engagements had taken place
between the hostile fleets on the 19th May, the 16th August, and the 28th
September. But on the other hand, the Spanish Ambassador claimed to
have the silver released, pretending it to be the King of Spain's property.
Accordingly it was ordered by the Council of State, on the 13th December,
" that Master Thomas Violet doe assist " Dr. Walker, the Commonwealth's
advocate, in prosecuting the three ships.
32 fjumismafa toraiinniaita.
On the 1 7th December in the same year, Violet made a protest in the
Court of Admiralty against the Sampson, Salvador, and George, and the ships
and silver were consequently stayed by order of the Council of State on that
day. The cargoes were seized on the 29th April, 1653, and in May it appears
that the Government had then unloaded and deposited in the Tower all the
bullion from these ships.
On the 28th June, 1653, Colonel John Barkstead, the Governor of the
Tower, was ordered by the Council " to take into his Custody, care, and
charge all such Summes of money as then were or should be coynd of the
Silver lately Seized and carried into the Tower of London." The coining
of this large amount of treasure occupied almost an entire year ; for on the
31st August, 1654, Colonel Jones reported to the Council of State from the
Committee of the Mint, that " the account of John Barkstead, Esq., Lieu-
tenant of the Tower, for the monyes by him received, being brought into
the Mint out of the ships Sampson, Salvador, George, Morning Starr, and the
Angell Michael, from the vi of June 1653 to 10 May 1654" amounted to
£278276. 8s. M., thus:—
Silver seized in the before-mentioned ships : weight
in standard silver 92234 lbs. 3 oz. 4 dwts. 1 grain : value
at £3 per pound weight £276702 . 16* . (V.
Gold taken from the Morning Star : weight in stan-
dard gold 14 lbs. 9 oz. 3 dwts. 18 grains : value at £405s. per pound weight 594 . 6.s . 4rf.
Shew of the whole : gold parted from the silver . 979. Qs.ld.
Total— £278276. 8.s.5r/.
The foregoing particulars are gathered from the Draft Order Book of
the Protector Oliver's Council of State, No. 80, pages 51, 55, 56 ; and also
from two curious and scarce tracts, entitled :
—
"A True Narrative of som Eemarkable Proceedings concerning the
Ships Samson, Salvador, and George, and several other Prize-ships depending
in the High Court of Admiraltie : most humbly presented to the Parlament
of the Common-wealth of England, and to the Eight Honorable the Council
of State by Autoritie of Parlament, and to the Honorable the Council of
&\}t SffmrauittBialtji ©fling. 33
Officers, of his Excellencie the Lord General. By Tho. Violet of London,
Gold-smith. London, Printed by William Du-Gard, An. Dom. 1(153 ; "' and
" Proposals humbly presented to His Highness Oliver Lord Protector of
England, &c. and to the High Court of Parlament, now assembled. By Tho.
Violet of London Goldsmith. London, Printed Anno Domini 1 656 ;" folio.
The following curious passage, also bearing upon this subject, is
extracted from a subsequent work by Thomas Violet, addressed to King
Charles II., and entitled—" An Appeal to Caesar : wherein Gold and Silver
is proved to be the Kings Majesties Koyal Commodity. London, Printed
in the Year 1660 ;" quarto. On page 39 Violet says :
—
" At last I ingaged Cromwel to take up the Silver from aboard the
Ships, Sampson, Salvador, and St. George, and that he would dissolve the
Parliament ; the same night that he dissolved the Ipng Parliament, he could
not sleep for it about the 15 April 1652 (-3). Cromwel sent Mr Sadler the
Town-Clerk of London, and Coll. Bingham to me, to come presently to
him at the Cock-pit, to give him the Coppies of all the Bills of these Ships
Lading, and the value of the Silver, which I did ; and after he had them
Cromwell could not sleep till he had the Silver in Barksteads custody in
the Tower... being 29 April 1653. Oliver Cromwell sent a guard of Souldiers
to seize on the Silver aboard these Ships, the Sampson, Salvador, and St.
George, the 20 day of April 1652 (-3). Bradshaw tore his Hair before me,
"and a Friend of mine, Bradshaw telling him that Cromwell had undone
them all by forcing the Parliament, and that now he saw apparently he was
an undone man. Bradshaw storming at me Tho. Violet, saying, I was the
fatallest man that ever was to the Councel and Parliament for staying this
Silver, and that had I not set the Councel and Parliament to stay this Sil-
ver, till that every mans claim was particularly proved, the Silver had been
all Transported, and Cromwell never durst have dissolved the Parliament,
had he not got the Silver in these Ships, being three hundred thousand
pounds into his hands." On page 45 he says in a note :— " This Silver
which I stayed was the only cause of blowing up the Long Parliament,
which I knew at that time an Army of 40000 men could not have done."
The Long Parliament was dissolved by Oliver Cromwell on the 20th
April 1653; and it seems to us likely that Violet only seized upon the
coincidence of dates to fabricate the above extraordinary assertions after
the Restoration.
34 funmmafa: ©rcmfoslHoa.
MINT AFFAIES.
Under this head we purpose including sundry matters relating to the
Coinage and to the Mint in the Tower of London, during the Protectorate
of Oliver Cromwell.
I.
—
The Officers of the Mint.
The Officers of his Mint were in all probability nearly the same persons,
with the same salaries, as those approved by the House of Commons on the
6th July, 1649. This supposition is confirmed by the circumstance that we
have found two persons named in the Council Order Books of the period of
the Protectorate as then holding the same offices as they did under the
Parliament, viz :— Thomas Simon, Chief Graver, and Eichard Pight, Clerk
of the Irons and Surveyor of the Melting House. We therefore give the
following list of officers with their salaries, from the Journals of the House
of Commons, vol. vi. pp. 212 and 252, orders of 21st May and 6th July, 1649,
as representing, to a great extent, the Mint establishment under the Lord
Protector Oliver:
—
Per Annum-Dr. Aaron Guerdain, Master of the Mint
• John St. John, Warden .
Walter Grime, Warden's Clerk
Henry Cogan, Comptroller
Peter Fenton, his Clerk
Andrew Palmer, and Thomas Woodward, Assay Masters
Their Clerk
— Bingley, and — Beale, Auditors : to each for his Clerk
And to each for parchment, ink, paper, and other necessaries
Anthony Knivet, and Tellers .
Their Clerk ....Eichard Pight, as Clerk of the Irons
As Surveyor of the Melting House
His Clerk ....Tho. Symons, Graver of the Irons
John Eeynolds, Under Assayer
John East, Under Graver
£.
iliit! Iffuit'S. 35
Per Annum— XI. a. d.
Daniel Brattle, and , Sinkers of the Irons . . 20
— Hodgins, Smith 10
John Dendy, Porter 10
Vening, Parson of the Chapel in the Tower, for his tythes -13 4
Symson, Sexton of the same Chapel . . . .— 4 4
For the diet of the Officers MJames Howard and John Eeinolds, Clerks, each . 20
II.
—
Appointments of Thomas Simon.
The following unpublished extracts from the original Draft Order Books
of the Protector Oliver's Council of State, now preserved in the Public Becord
Office, afford us some interesting information respecting Thomas Simon's
appointments in the Mint.
We learn from them that on the 15th February, 1654-5, it was ordered
by his Highness the Lord Protector, by and with the advice and consent of
the Council of State, that Thomas Simon be Sole Chief Engraver for the
Mint and Seals ; and on the next clay it was ordered that he be Medal-
maker for the State. The first order was approved on the 6th March ; but
on the 1 6th of the same month another order was made at greater length,
recommending that Thomas Simon should have the salary of twenty marks
—£13 . 6s. Sd.—per annum for " the sole making of all Medals for his High-
ness and the public service, and of the Chains to the said Medals," and that
he should also have the salary of thirty pounds per annum as Chief Graver
of the Mint and Seals. This order was approved on the 20th March.
We now present our readers with these extracts verbatim et literatim :—
Thursday, 15th February, 1654-5.— " Ordered by his Highness ye Lo.
Protector by and wh the advise and Consent of the Counsell 5. That
M1' Thomas Symon be sole Cheife Ingraver for the Minte and Seales, and
have ye ffee of p. ann. annexed to his place."
—
Pae/r 38, Draft Order
Book No. 82.
Friday, 16th February, 1654-5.— "Ordered by [his Highness the
Lord Protector ] by and with the advise of the Counsell, That Thomas
Symon be Medall maker for the State."—Page 40, Draft Order Booh No. 82.
36 ^umij&mata © r- ff in tu 5 1 li a it rt
.
Friday, 10th March, 1654 5, (pout meridiem ).— Ordered "That it be
offered to his Highness as the advise of ye Counsell, That Thomas Symon
be constituted and appoynted Meddall maker, and to have the sole makeing
of all Meddalls for his Highness and the publique service, and of the
Chaines to ye sayd Meddalls, wth a Salary of xx*y Markes p ann, as Med-
dall maker, and Libty to have the free use of such presses, Roles, and Cutters
wth other Instrumts necessary for that worke as are or shall belong tp ye
Coffton Wealth in the Tower or elsewhere, And that his Highness would
be pleased to graunt the sayd Office wth the sayd Sallary, and the Office of
Cheife Graver of the Mint and Seales wth the Sallary of 30 l p ann. to the
sayd Thomas Symon by patent accordingly."
—
Page 88, Draft Order Book
No. 82.
The Patent alluded to in the last Order was granted by the Protector
to Thomas Simon on the 9th July, 1656, and it confers on him the same
offices and emoluments as those mentioned in that Order. He is to be
" Sole Chief Engraver of the Irons of and for the moneys of us and our
successors within our Tower of London," with the salary of thirty pounds
a year, commencing on the 25th March, 1655. He is further granted the
sole right of making, cutting, or engraving the arms of the Protector or of
the Commonwealth on certain articles ; and is constituted the sole maker
of medals and the chains thereto belonging, at a yearly salary of£13 . 6.s. 8d.,
also to begin on the 25th March, 1655. He had, moreover, the privilege of
choosing the Under Engraver and Sinker of the Irons. This Patent was
inrolled on the 11th November, 1657 ; but, as the wording of it is very
lengthy, we reserve our copy of it for the Appendix.
III.
—
Committee of Council for the Mint.
We find that the Protector appointed a Committee of Council for Mint
Affairs, since the Council of State on the 16th February, 1653-4, ordered
—
" That these be a Cofnittee for considering of the Regulacon of ye Mint,
Ma. Gr. Lambt, Col. Jones, Sr Charles Wolsley, Mr Strickland, Col. Mack-
worth, or any three of them."
—
Page 4, Draft Order Book No. 77.
On the 7th of March, Col. Sydenham was added to this Committee
(Page 85, Draft Order Book No. 17) ; on the 27th of April, Col. Fiennes
was added (Page 66, Draft Order Book No. I'd) ; and on the 28th of April,
Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper was added (Page 76, Draft Order Book No. 79,).
glint gHaiu. 37
It may interest our readers if we give here a few brief notes respecting
the connection between the Protector and the persons forming this Com-
mittee ; although very little is known regarding the lives of some of them.
The majority of the Council, however, had been leading officers in the
Commonwealth's army.
Major-General Lambert is a prominent and well known name in this
period. He was a member of Oliver's first Parliament, which met on the
3d of September, 1654 ; and was also one of the Major-Generals of Counties
appointed on the 9th August 1655, his district including five of the northern
counties of England. His active employment under the Protectorate ceased
with his dismissal from all his appointments in July, 1657; for, having
offended Cromwell by not presenting himself when the members of the
Council took the oath of fidelity to the new government (just confirmed
by Oliver's second installation as Lord Protector on the 26th June, 1657 ),
and showing himself dissatisfied with that condition of things, he was
deprived of his commissions ; but received instead a retiring pension of
£2000 per annum.
Colonel Philip Jones was member for Brecknockshire in the Long
Parliament. Under the Protector he was " Comptroller of His Highness's
Household ", and one of his House of Lords, with the title of " Philip Lord
Jones."
Sir Charles Wolseley, Baronet, was member for Staffordshire in Oliver's
first and second Parliaments ; and was one of his peers, under the title of
"Charles Lord Wolseley."
Mr. Walter Strickland was member for Minehead in the Long Parlia-
ment, and had been some time the Commonwealth's Ambassador in Holland.
He was also elected a member in both of Cromwell's Parliaments, and made
one of his peers, as "Walter Lord Strickland."
Colonel Humphrey Mackworth was a lawyer of Shrewsbury, and Gover-
nor of that place when Charles II. unsuccessfully summoned it on his road to
Worcester in 1651. He died about a year after his appointment as one of
Oliver's Privy Councillors, and was buried on the 26th December, 1654, in
Henry VII. 's Chapel, at Westminster Abbey. His was one of the twenty-one
bodies of Commonwealth worthies, exhumed by order of Charles II. on the
38 guraismata ©mmbnlliain.
12th September 1661, and re-interred in a pit dug in St. Margaret's Church-
yard. ( See Dean Stanley's Historical Memorials of Westminster Abbey, 2nd
edition, London 1868, page 237 et seq.)
Colonel William Sydenham was member for Melcombe Eegis in the
Long Parliament, and was also member of the two Protectorate Parliaments.
Oliver made him one of the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury, and a
member of his House of Peers under the title of "William Lord Sydenham."
Colonel the Honourable Nathaniel Fiennes was the second son of the
Viscount Say and Sele; he was member for Banbury in the Long Parliament,
and was also a representative in both of Oliver's Parliaments. The Protector
made him one of the Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal in 1655, and
in 1657 one of his peers as "Nathaniel Lord Fiennes."
With regard to Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper, Baronet, afterwards the
first Earl of Shaftesbury, we would refer the reader to his Memoirs, Letters,
and Speeches, etc., edited by W. D. Christie, 8vo, London 1859 ; remarking
here only that he was elected for Oliver's two Parliaments, but was one of
the members excluded from the second.
IV.
—
Counterfeiters of Coin.
In the Council Order Books there are several entries relating to the
counterfeiting of the current coin ; and the false coiners seem to have been
very numerous at this period. From their dates it appears that these orders
must refer to the money bearing the Commonwealth's type, just described
( antea pp. 29, 30 ); and in the British Museum, as well as in several private
collections, specimens of such counterfeits are still preserved.
The earliest orders on the subject are Contained in the following extract:
Tuesday, 3d April, 1655.—"Col. Jones reports the service pformed 1 to
the Coffton wealth by Eichard Pight, Clerk of the Irons and Surveyor of the
melting houses in the Mynt, in his discovering and prosequuting of Counter-
feit Coyne, and the psons 2 guilty of Counterfeitting the same ; Ord. [ by his
Highness the Lord Protector ] by and wth the Counsells Advise That a
warrt3 be issued to Mr Grualter Frost for paym* of Lu to the s d 5 Eichard
Pight towards ye Charge and Eecompence of that service, out of the Coun-
sells Contingencies.
^performed. 2 persons. 3 warrant. 4 £50. 5 said.
fflini Iffairs. 39
" That it be referred to Col. Sydenham, Col. Jones, ye E. 1 of Mulgrave,
Col. Mountagu and Mr Rouse or any 2 of them to speake with the Mr 2 and
Warden of the Mint, and to informe themselves what service is due from
those officers by vertue of their places in relacon to the Counterfeiters of
Coyne, and if it shall apTe 3 p * i of the Duty of those offic8 5 to take care
that Counterfeit1,3 of Coyne be discovered and prosequuted, then to informe
themselves further how it comes to pass that the service is pformed by ano-
ther hand to ye increasing of the Comonwealth's charge, and to make report
to ye Counsell."—Page 1, Draft Order Book No. 83.
The first order, relating to Richard Pight, who was Clerk of the Irons
and Surveyor of the Melting House in the Mint (see page 34 above), was
approved on the 5th of the same month, and a copy of the warrant to pay
him £50 is entered in the Money "Warrant Book of the Council of State,
No. 126, page 143. It is dated the 6th April, 1655, and is addressed to
Mr. Grualter Frost, Treasurer of the Council's Contingencies.
The " other hand " referred to in the latter order would be of course
Eichard Pight, and it would therefore appear that the discovery of false
coiners being no part of his official business, he received extra remuneration
for such services. The report ordered in the last two lines of the above
extract cannot be found, after a careful search, and it does not seem to
have ever been made.
A further order of the Council, for paying Mr. Pight another sum of
fifty pounds for the same service, is dated
—
Thursday, 12th July, 1655, (ante meridiem).— Ordered "That the
Corhittee of the Counsell to whom ye peticon of Eichard Pight, Clerke of
the Irons and Surveyor of the melting houses in the Mint, conc'ning his
charges in discovring and prosequuteing of Counterfeiters of Coyne was
referred, doe meet in ordr to a report, and that in the meane tyme there
be p'd him out of the Counsells Contingencyes the sufhe of fiftie pounds;
and that a warr* to Mr ffrost be in that behalfe issued."
—
Page 44, Draft
Order Book No. 84.
This order was approved by the Protector in person, and a warrant
dated on the same day, for paying £50 to Richard Pight, is entered in the
Money Warrant Book No. 126, page 167.
1 Earl 2 Master 3 appeare 4 part 6 officers
40 guraisraaia ©iffratoiUiatu.
We give here two further extracts relating to the same subject :
—
Wednesday, 9th January, 1655-6.— Ordered "That it be referred to
Major Gen11 Baxter, 1 L* 2 of the Tower, L* Col. White, and Edward Cresset
esqr or any 2 of them, to take consideration of the peticon of Eichard Pight,
Clerke of the Irons and Surveyo1 of the Melting house to his Highness Mint,
and to informe themselves of the Services by him pformed, about discovring,
apprehending, and prosecuteing false Coyners, and of the charge, and im-
portance thereof, and in what way the sayd Service may be further pursued,
wth most advantage to ye Cofnon Wealth, and in ordr thereunto, to consider
his proposalls annexed to his peticon, and what may be fitt to be allowed the
petr 3, both as to tyme past, and for the future, in consideracon thereof,
and to make their report upon ye whole mattr wth the 1 st oportunity."
—
Page 119, Draft Order Book No. 86.
Thursday, 7th August, 1656.—"On reading of a Eeport from Sr John
Berkstead kn* , and Edward Cresset Esqr, dated the 14th of May 1656, in
pursuiance of the Counsells reference of ye 9th of January last, upon the
peticon of Eichard Pight, Clerk of the Irons and Surveyor of the Melting
house to his Highness Mynt, togeather wth ye proposalls thereunto annexed,
touching the Services by him pformed 4 about discovring, apprehending, and
prosequuteing false Coyners, They thereby certifying, the petrs 5 diligent
attending of the sayd Service for the space of five yeares, and his prosequu-
ting about 50 false Coyners, in sevrall pts 6 of this Nacon ; For his charge
wherein he hath received onely one hundred pounds, being short of his Costs,'
expences therein sustayned; and that the petr is a fitt p'son? for the execu-
con of y* 8 Service ; Ordered by [his Highness the Lord Protector] and the
Counsell, That according to ye tenor of the sayd report, there be paid unto
the sayd Eichard Pight the Sum of Seaventy pounds for and in lieu of y6
Services by him already pformed, to the date of the sayd report, as also the
Sum eighty two pounds three shillings for sevrall Contingent Charges byhim disburst in y* Service to y* tyme, since the 20th day of March 1655; And
" That it be referred to Sr John Barkstead kn* , and Mr Cresset, wth
L* Col. Francis White, or any 2 of them, to view as well the quantity, and
quality of all Irons, instrumta, utensiles, and other materialls for Counterfeit
1 Barkstead 2 Lieutenant 3 petitioner i performed 5 petitioner's 6 parts 7 person 8 that
Hint Iffaiu. 41
Coyning, as also all Counterfeit peices of Coyne, plates, mettalls, and other
materialls prepared for that use, that have been seized by the sayd Richard
Pight, and brought into the Tower of London, and to cause the sayd Irons,
instrumts, and utensiles, Counterfeitted peices of Coyne, mettalls, and mate-
rialls to be defaced and made useless ; and the sayd moneys and mettalls to
be melted downe, and an assay thereof taken, and the true value thereof
estimated, and deliv'red into ye hands of the sayd Richard Pight, for and
towards the sayd Sumes of Seaventy pounds, and eighty two pounds three
shillings soe ordered to be paid unto him ; And to c'tyfy * what ye same
amounts unto, y* further provision may be made for ye remayndr thereof."
—Pages 315, 316, Entry Booh No. 105.
On Saturday, 13th September, 1656, His Highness gave his approbation
to the foregoing order of the 7th August [Entry Book No. 105,p. 394) ; and
the whole matter appears to have been brought to a conclusion by the Coun-
cil's order of
—
Thursday, 4th December, 1656.— " On reading a report from Sr John
Barkstead kn* , & Lievt. Col. ffrancis White, in pursuance of the Councell's
order of the 7th of August 1656, whereby it was referred to them, to view
the Instrumts, materialls, and Counterfeit Coyne, seized by Richard Pight,
Clerke of the Irons &c, and to cause the said Instrumts &c. to be defaced,
and the value thereof, and of the said Coyne to be estimated, to the intent
the same may be applyed towards satisfying him the severall sumes of Se-
venty pounds and eighty three pounds, ordered to be payd him for service,
and disbursemts, in discovery of Counterfeit Coyners ; They certifying, that
the premises amount unto Thirty seven pounds two shillings, which is deli-
vered to the said Richard Pight, towards his satisfaction ( besides a great
press for the Coyning of money, formerly stolne out of the Tower, being
most of it brasse, woh if defaced, will amount to ye value of fourty shillings)
Ordered by. his Highness the Lo. Protector and the Councell, That the said
presse be continued for the service of the Mint, and delivered into the charge
of the proper Officer thereof, And that in satisfaction of the residue of the
said sufhes, there be payd to the said Richard Pight, out of the money arise-
ing from the proffits of the Mint, the surhe of one hundred & fifteene pounds,
1 certify.
42 gunmntata tovvmiatllnun.
eighteene shillings, And the Warden of his Highness Mint at the Tower is
hereby empow'red, and required, to pay ye same accordingly."
—
Page 557,
Entry Book No. 105 of the Council of State (in the Public Eecord Office).
According to a memorandum in the margin, this order was approved in
person on the same day, His Highness the Lord Protector being present.
The following extract from a contemporary newspaper affords us an
interesting example of Eichard Pight's proceedings against the false coiners.
It is exactly copied from The Publick Intelligencer, Number 4, from Monday
October 22 to Monday October 29, 1655.
" An Advertisement.
" There is a great offendor of this Commonwealth, whose name is
Abraham Stapley, thirty years of age, a Sussex man, brown haired, of middle
size, whitely coloured, very slender, usually going in sad coloured clothes
;
he first lived in Westminster, at the Mill-bank ; from thence he went to
Red-rose street in Covent-Garden, from thence into DirtyLane in Saint Gileses;
from thence to Saint Scweries dock ; from thence to Betford. This Abraham
Stapley is a false Coiner of money, for, in his house at Detford were found
several false Coining Irons for half Crowns, and false half Crowns, Coined
with the date 1655. and this is to give notice to all persons whatsoever,
that shall receive any of this said money of Stapleys, dated 1655. there being
none of that date in his Highness Mint coined to this day the 26. of October;
If they do not give notice to me Richard Pight, I shall wheresoever I finde
them, prosecute them according to the Law : whosoever shall apprehend
this party, and bring certain Intelligence to Master Pight in the Tower,
Surveyour of the Melting-house in his Highnesse Mint, shall receive five
pounds for their faithful service to the Commonwealth.
"Richard Pight:'
It is perhaps unnecessary to remind the reader that Stapley was liable
to the punishment of death for counterfeiting the coin of the realm ( see
page 21 above) ; for this crime had been held to be high treason ever since
the year 1351 (25 Edward III. chapter 2.)
The statement of Pight in this advertisement, that no money had been
coined with the date 1655 up to the 26th October in that year, is interesting;
IliiTt affairs, +3
although it is very likely that a few shillings and six-pences were made in
November or December, 1655. We have never seen any gold coins of that
date, nor any genuine silver crowns or half-crowns;yet one of the latter is
said to have been in the Wigan collection. In the British Museum are
plated forgeries of half-crowns dated 1654 and 1655; that of 1655 being
probably one of the identical false half-crowns made by Stapley. Mr. John
Evans, F. E. S. &c, has also kindly favoured the author with the loan of a
false half-crown of base metal, dated 1656. This latter piece, as well as a
rude imitation of the half-groat in the British Museum, is no doubt one of
the contemporary productions of the counterfeiters of Commonwealth coins,
against whom Bichard Pight was so active. It should be distinctly under-
stood, however, that all the foregoing remarks refer only to coins with the
Commonwealth's type, as described on page 30 above, and not to any coins
with the Protector's bust.
We further observe, by the Council Entry Book No. 105, that four per-
sons having been condemned at the Northampton Assizes for this crime of
coining, the Protector granted a reprieve to the fourth criminal, on the 5th
September, 1656 ; and in the Privy Seal Book No. 13, we also find the inrol-
ment of a Letter of Privy Seal, issued by the Protector Oliver, 10th March,
1656-7, for paying to Eobert Worrall, Keeper of Grettam Lodge in the
Forest of Rockingham, Northamptonshire, the sum of fifty pounds, " as a
reward for his paines, expences, and service, in apprehending of certaine
persons, attainted of high-treason for counterfeiting the coyne of this Com-
monwealth." These were no doubt the same persons as those mentioned in
the Council Book.
In October, 1659, Bichard Pight again appears as a prosecutor, the
defendant this time being Cecil Lord Baltimore, whose money for his terri-
tory of Maryland is well known to all American numismatists. The shilling,
six-pence, and groat, of silver, are represented in Folkes's and Budinys plate
xxx. nos. 6, 7, 8.' They each bear the bust and name of Lord Baltimore on
the obverse, with his arms, the value, and a motto on the reverse. From the
Council Entry Book, Interregnum, No. 107, p. 646, we learn that Richard
Pight gave information to the Council of State " that Cicill Lord Baltamore
and diverse others with him, and for him, have made and transported great
Sums of money, and doe still goe on to make more." The Council thereupon
ordered, on Tuesday, 4th October, 1659, "That a warrant be issued forth
to the said Eichard Pight for the apprehending of the Lord Baltamore and
such others as are suspected to be ingaged wth hirn, in the said offence, and
for the seizeing of all such moneys, stamps, tooles & Instrum*3 for Coyning
the same, as can be met wth, and to bring them in safe custody to the
Counsell."
On the following day, however, the Council made another order, which
is in less severe terms, and was perhaps substituted for their former one, viz
:
Wednesday, 5th October, 1659.—"The Councell being informed that
a great quantity of Silver is coyned into peeces of diverse rates & values,
and sent into Maryland, by the Lo. Baltamore or his order. Ordered, That
the said Lo. Baltamore be sumoned to attend the Cofnittee of the Councell
for Plantacons, who are to inquire into the whole business, and to report
the state thereof to the Councell."
—
Page 653, Entry Book No. 107.
No further notices about this matter can be found among the records,
and we conclude that the report of the Committee for Plantations was never
made, the Council of State being dissolved by Lambert on the 1 3th October
1659, only eight days afterwards.
It will scarcely appear surprising that Eichard Pight had raised up
many enemies by all these proceedings, and accordingly we find, amongst
the State Papers of the Interregnum, a curious petition from him, addressed
to the Council of State appointed by authority of Parliament, printed on
one side of a folio sheet, without date. It must, however, have been printed
somewhere between the months of May and October 1659, during which
time only this Council sat. In this Petition, Pight complains that the Under
Graver, Nicholas Birch, had combined against him with Thomas Violet and
several of the false coiners whom he had previously prosecuted. Pight also
states that Violet had charged him with keeping correspondence with the
false coiners, when on the contrary he had instituted proceedings against
many of them, " and preferring a Bill of Indictment against Thomas Webband Mary White for Coining false Dollars, 1655, although the Witness did
make it fully appear they were guilty of the same, yet they were acquitted
both by the Judgment of the Bench of Justices and Jury, there being ( as
they said ) no Law in force to convict them of the said fact." Pight goes
itiiif glfaius. 45
on to say that in the last four years (1655— loo 9 ) he had prosecuted more
than eighty persons for false coining, and had not received one penny for
his disbursements in doing so, or salary since 1651 ; £500 being now due
to him, and £100 for his salary for his office in the Mint.* He then requests
" to be protected and indemnified from such suits as are now pending ( in
particular by Henry Cole), and from the violence and malice of Thomas
Violet,f and all other Offenders and Confederates, which are your Petitioner's
enemies for his faithful service done to this Commonwealth, daily seeking
his ruin." He concludes by asking for full power to prosecute such false
coiners. See p. 597, vol. x. of Interregnum Petitions, Public Eecord Office.
It does not appear, after a careful search, that any response was made
to this Petition, and there seems no doubt that the unsettled state of the
government effectually prevented anything being done.
In 1660, however, Richard Pight again presented a petition, this time
addressed to King Charles II. He prays for confirmation in his office in the
Mint, and annexes an account of eighty-six false coiners prosecuted by him
from August 1650 to 1659 ; and he also alleges that £100 of his Mint salary,
and £500 for prosecuting these coiners, are still due to him. (Mrs. Everett
Green's Calendar of Domestic State Papers, 1660—1661, page 10.) It is
probable that Pight was, like many others, continued in his former employ-
ment ; although we do not know who filled the offices of Clerk of the Irons
and Surveyor of the Melting House for twelve years after the Restoration.
* The reader will nevertheless have observed that over £252, in money and goods, had been
ordered to be paid to him by the Protector, and that a large portion of it had actually been so paid.
t The same person as the T. Violet who discovered the silver ships, etc., see pp. 31—33 above.
V.
—
Sir Ralph Maddison's Pamphlet.
A curious pamphlet on Mint Affairs, written by Sir Ralph Maddison,
Knight, is among the King's Pamphlets in the British Museum, no. 18,
vol. 625. According to a contemporary manuscript note on the title-page,
it was published in December, 1654, although the printed date is 1655. It
is a small quarto of twenty-three leaves, composed of the title and epistle-
dedicatory on two leaves, followed by pages 1—42. The title runs thus
:
46 furaismata ©Mrafojlliana.
" Great Britains Eemembrancer, Looking In and Out. Tending to the
Increase of the Monies of the Commonwealth. Presented to his Highness
the Lord Protector, And to the High Court of Parliament now assembled.
By the Author Balphe Maddison, K* . London 1655."
This tract consists of an essay on the five following subjects : 1. Unequal
Exchange, or the Merchants' Exchange. 2. The Balance of Trade. 3. A Bank
and a Banker. 4. A standing Council for Mint-affairs. 5. Free Ports. The
author discusses at length these and similar commercial and monetary ques-
tions, and offers many propositions ; but, although it seemed advisable to
point out the existence of this pamphlet for the benefit of those readers who
may wish to further investigate the subject, it contains no information con-
cerning the mint and the coins of the period which seems to require special
notice in this place.
It should be observed, however, that a large portion of the subject
matter in Gh'eat Britain's Remembrancer is reproduced from an earlier pam-
phlet by Maddison, also on trade and currency questions, of which two
editions are in the Library of the British Museum. The title of the first
edition is— " Englands Looking In and Out. Presented to the High Court of
Parliament now Assembled. By the Author R. M. Knight. " London, 1 640,
seventeen leaves, small quarto. The second edition is exactly similar, and
apparently from the same types, the only difference being the alteration of
the date on the title-page from 1640 to 1641.
Respecting the author himself, we have not been able to find muchinformation. On the 16th August, 1649, a Committee of the Council of
State was appointed to speak with him about the business of the Coin, the
means whereby the Mint might be set to work, etc. ( See Violet's Mysteries
and Secrets of Trade and Mint-affairs, London, 1653, page 161.) Maddison
may have been, therefore, a goldsmith of some standing, whose experience
in monetary matters was esteemed by the Council.
THE PEACE OF WESTMINSTEE MEDALS.
Before proceeding further in our Medallic History, it will be necessary
to describe tlie Dutch Medals that were made on the occasion of the Peace
of Westminster. This treaty of alliance, offensive and defensive, between
the Commonwealth of England and the United Provinces of the Nether-
lands, was signed at Westminster on the 5th April, 1654, and proclaimed
in London on the 26th April. A Proclamation for the cessation of all acts
of hostility between the two countries was made on the 2nd May.
M. Bizot, in his Histoire Metallique de la Republique de Hollande, edit.
1688, torn. ii. p. 226, says that the three medals—Nos. I. to III. described
below—were struck at Amsterdam on the publication of this Peace. Also
Nos. IV. and V., since they bear Dutch inscriptions, obviously belong to the
same country. Gerard van Loon further states that Nos. I. to IV. were pro-
duced at Amsterdam.
Medal No. I.
Obverse, Neptune on a car, drawn by two sea-horses : the shields of arms
of England and Holland resting on his knees, between which is a wreath.
He holds a trident in his right hand, and above his head is the caduceus,
which supports Mercury's winged hat, between two palm branches. On each
side of the car is a Triton swimming in the sea, and blowing a conch. The
artist's name, " Jerian Pool" is engraved at the sides of Neptune's head.
Around the whole is the legend : amantivm ira amicitle redintegratio est
(The quarrelling of friends is the renewing of friendship), an altered line
from Terence, Andria, act iii., scene 3, line 23. At the end of this legend
are the words "fecit Amsterdami," in small letters, evidently intended to be
read thus—" Jerian Poolfecit Amsterdami."
Eeverse, a Dutch inscription in fifteen lines, as follows:
—
"Ter Memorie
der Vrede, Unie en Confasderatie, den 15 April solemnelyek gesloten tot West
Munster, tusschen zyn Hoogheyf den Meer Protecteur vande Republique van
Engelant, Schotlant, en Trlant ter eener, en de Hooghmogende Heeren Staten
Generael ter andre syde ; daer op wederzyts Ratificatie in behoorlycke forme den
2 der maent May is uytgewisselt, en gepubliceert den 27 der selver Maent. Anno
1 654." ( In memory of the peace, union and confederation solemnly concluded
48 fumismata (BcffrafoilltEtni.
at Westminster, the 15th April, between His Highness the Lord Protector
of England, Scotland, and Ireland, on the one part, and the High and
Mighty Lords the States General on the other part ; of which the ratifica-
tions were duly exchanged by both parties the 2nd May, and published the
27th of the same month, in the year 1654.) These dates are according to
the new style, then in use in Holland, but not in this country.
This medal is circular, size 2-3 inches in diameter ; there is a silver
specimen of it in the British Museum.
It is engraved in— M. Bizot's Histoire Metattique de la Republique de
Hollande, 1688, vol. ii., facing page 226, Eaguenet's Histoire <f Olivier
Cromwel, 1691, p. 252, Grregorio Leti's Vita di Oliviero Cromvele, 1692,
vol. ii. p. 353, Gr. Leti's Vie d''Olivier Cromwel, 1694, vol. ii., facing p. 320,
Le Clerc's Histoire des Provinces-Unies des Pays Pas, 1723, no. cl of the plates
of medals (but it is the obverse of our No. I joined to the reverse of No. II),
Gr. van Loon's Beschryving der Nederlandsche Historipenningen, 1723, vol. ii.
p. 383, no. 4, and in Gr. van Loon's Histoire Metallique des XVII. Provinces
des Pays-Pas, 1732-6, vol. ii. p. 371, no. 4.
Medal No. II.
Obverse, two allegorical female figures seated, representing the republics
of England and Holland. The former has the Irish harp resting on her knees,
and the latter has the Belgic lion couching at her feet. They are together
holding up a hat, emblem of the liberty of the two republics. Legend —MENTIBUS TJNITIS PRISCUS PROCUL ABSIT AMAROR, PILEA NE STJBITO PAETA
cruore rtjant ( Now that union reigns in our minds, may the former bit-
terness be banished from them, lest the liberties procured through blood bexv
suddenly destroyed.) In the exergue— Concl: xxv D. April. Ao. m.dc.liv.
(Concluded the 15th, [or 25th, new style] day of April, 1654.)
Eeverse, two large three-masted ships of war, resting side by side on
the sea, one carrying the colours of England, the other those of Holland.
Legend— luxtjriat gemino nexu tranquilla salo res, excipit unanimes
totitjs orbis amor (Commerce, tranquillized by the double alliance, flour-
ishes on the sea, and the whole world receives the allies with pleasure.) The
initials of the artist s. D., for Sebast Dadler, may be discovered in minute
letters on both sides of this medal.
A circular medal, well engraved and struck, size 2-3 inches in diameter.
We have seen silver specimens in the British Museum, and in two private
collections. A copper one formed lot 2432 in Baron Michiels van Verduy-
nen's sale, Maestricht, April, 1872.
It is engraved in— M. Bizot's Mistoire Metallique de la Republique de Hol-
lande, 1688, vol. ii. facing p. 226, Eaguenet's Histoire d'Olivier Cromwel,
1691, p. 253, Gregorio Leti's Vita di Olwiero Cromvele, 1692, vol. ii. p. 354,
Gr. Leti's Vie d'Olivier Cromwel, 1694, vol. ii. facing p. 322, Gr. van Loon's
Beschryving der Nederlandsche Mistoripenningen, 1723, vol. ii. p. 383, no. 3,
and in Van Loon's Histoire Metalliqae des Pays-Ban, 1732, vol. ii. p. 371 no. 3.
Medal No. III.
Obverse, two female figures, representing Peace and Justice, with their
usual attributes, standing, and supporting a cornucopia between them.
Above, is the word " Jehovah," in Hebrew letters, in a cloud. Legend
—
HiE MIHI ervnt artes (These will be my occupations), from Virgil's iEneid,
book vi. line 853. In the exergue, the date : CioioCLini (1654).
Eeverse, the following Latin inscription, in eighteen lines—Q. F. F. Q. s.
[ Quod felix faustumque sit~\. post . atrox . belvm . qvod . inter . anglic^ .
BELGIOaiQVE . REIP.w6&C« RECTORES . BIS . FRVSTRA . TENTATIS . PACIS . CONDI-
TIONIBVS . ANO . ClOlOCLII . EXARSlT . IN . QVO . MAXIMIS . VTRINQVE . CLASSIBVS .
SEX . SEPTENTRIONALI . DVO . MEDITER.nmeO MARI . PVGNATA . SVNT . CRVENTA .
PR.3BLIA . DEI . OVT.imi MAX.imt BENEEICIO . AVSPICIIS . OLIVARII . M.agnw BRITA-
NLE . PROTECTORIS . ET . FOEDER.«fo' BELGII . ORDINVM . PAX . CVM . ANTIQVO .
FOEDERE . RESTITVTA . CVIVS . OPTIMA .' RERVM . IN . MEMORIAM . SEMPITERNAM
.
s.enatus v.opulus Q.ue A.mstelodamensis hoc . monvmentvm . F.ieri c.urarunt*
( May this be happy and favourable. After a cruel war, which, conditions
of peace having been twice proposed in vain, had been commenced in the
year 1652, between the government of the English Commonwealth and that
of the Eepublic of the Low Countries, a war in which very great fleets on
each side were engaged in six bloody battles on the North Sea, and two on
the Mediterranean ; Peace and the ancient alliance have been re-established
by the grace of the greatest and best God, under the auspices of Oliver,
* The parts printed in Italics are not on the medal.
so gunmmafa ©wrafoilliHtta.
Protector of Great Britain, and of the States of the United Provinces. In
memory of which peace, the best of things, this memorial has been made,
by order of the senate and people of Amsterdam.)
A circular medal, size 2-5 inches in diameter.
We know of no specimen of this rare medal existing in this country.
It is engraved in—M. Bizot's Ilistoire Metallique de la Republique de Jlollande,
16S8, vol. ii., facing page 228, Eaguenet's Ilistoire d' Olivier Cromwel,
1691, p. 254, Gregorio Leti's Vita di Oliriero Cromvelr, 1692, vol. ii.
p. 355, G. Leti's Vie d'Olirier Cromwel, 1694, vol. ii., facing page 323,
G. van Loon's Beschryving der Nederlandsche IIMoripenningen, 1723, vol. ii.
p. 383, no. 2, and in Van Loon's Ilistoire Metallique des Pays-Bas, 1732,
vol. ii. p. 371, no. 2.
Medal ISto. IV.
Obverse, two Amazons, symbolic of the two Eepublics, standing, wear-
ing cuirasses, helmets, and plumes, and each holding in one hand a lance
with a hat on the end. Upon flags at the ends of the lances, are the arms
of England and Holland. A figure of Peace joins together the two lances
with a branch of olive. The English Amazon carries in her right hand a
shield of the English arms ( St. George's cross impaled with the harp ), and
at her feet are the Irish harp and the Scottish thistle. The Dutch Amazon
holds in her left hand a sheaf of seven arrows, tied up with a cord, which
also restrains the Belgic lion, crouching at her feet. Legend— hier bint
DE HEIL'GE VREE DEN BEIT' EN BATAVIER' DE WERELT EER ' T VERBONT
EN vreez' ER KRYGS banier ( Here holy Peace unites the English and
the Dutch ; may the world honour their alliance, and fear their banners.)
Eeverse, a large three-masted ship of war sailing to the right. Above
it, flying in the air, a figure of Fame proclaims the peace with her trumpet.
Tritons blowing conches also swim around the ship. In the exergue is the
date—
A
. 1654. Legend— waarom zeilt' t vredeschip op t silver in
DE ZEE ? OM DAT DE BROEDERKRIIG VERANDERT IS IN VREE ( "Why sails the
Ship of Peace on the silver (medal) in the midst of the sea? It is because
the strife of brothers is changed into peace.)
A circular medal, size 3 -16 inches in diameter. All the specimens of it
which have come to our knowledge are made of silver, first cast, and then
finished by hand chasing. That in the British Museum has been gilt.
This medal is engraved in M. Bizot's Histoire Metattique de la Republique
de Hottande, vol. iii., Supplement, 1690, fig. 84, facing p. 176, Or. van
Loon's Beschryring der Nederlandsche Historipenningen, 1723, vol. ii. p. 383,
no. 1, and in Van Loon's Histoire JHetallique des Pays-Bas, 1732, vol. ii.
p. 371, no. 1.
Medal No. V.
The fifth medal commemorative of the Peace of Westminster is, we
believe, hitherto unpublished, and is also very probably unique. Our illus-
tration, plate ii. no. 3, is taken from the original in the British Museum,
which is entirely chased by hand on a flat plate of silver. According to the
reverse inscription, it appears to have been made at the private cost of
Pieter Lips and Ferdinand de Backere, Burgomasters of the town of Sluys,
in commemoration of this peace between England and the Netherlands.
The Obverse bears a representation of the Protector Oliver, standing
on a dais, and presenting the treaty to the Dutch Ambassador. The figures
are badly drawn, in the costume of the period, and there seems to be no
attempt at portraiture, since the figure of Cromwell is certainly very unlike
him. In the background is slightly sketched the arch of a building. Le-
gend— VREDE . GESL0TEN . TVSSCHEN . DEN . HEER . HEERE . PROTECTEVR .
CROMWEL . EN . D'HO : MO : HEEREN . STATEN . GENERAEL . IN . DEN . IARE 1654
( Peace concluded between the Lord Protector Cromwell and the High and
Mighty Lords the States General, in the year 1654.)
Eeverse, a large shield bearing the arms of Sluys, viz.: gules, two bars
wavy argent. The shield is surmounted by the coronet of a Count, and is
suspended by a strap from the branch of a tree ; a common method of repre-
senting a shield of arms. Legend— pieter . lips . ende . ferdinande . de .
BACKERE . BVRGEMEESTERS . DER . STADT . SLVYS . ANNO . 1654. (Pieter Lips
and Ferdinand de Backere, Burgomasters of the town of Sluys, in the year
1654. ) There is a lozenge at the end of the legend on each side of the
medal, which is circular, and measures 3 -4 inches in diameter.
THE PATTERN FARTHINGS OF 1654.
It is well known by most of our readers that a great variety of small
brass and copper tokens, made and issued by tradesmen, tavern-keepers, etc.,
came into use upon the discontinuance of the royal farthing tokens of Charles
the First, about the year 1649. The confusion and loss arising from the
former were, however, soon perceived, and several proposals were made for
the coinage of a state farthing, or an universally current copper coin to be
issued by the government, to supersede all the private tokens. Patterns of
such state farthings were made in 1649 and 1651, and petitions and propo-
sals on this subject continued to be received by the authorities up to the year
1654, but in a newspaper of that date it is remarked that
—
"It is uncertain also what will be done about Farthing Tokens."—Page
3704, No. 233, of Severatt Proceedings of State Affaires, 9-1 6 March, 1 653-4.
The Protector's Council of State, however, disposed of the matter by
the following order :
—
Thursday, 16th March, 1653-4.—"Col. Jones reports from ye Comittee
for ye Mint their opinion touching the sevrall peticons & proposalls made
conc'ning farthings,
"Ordered that the said peticons be layd aside."
—
Page 12, Draft Order
Booh No. 78.
We have not been able to discover, either in the Public Record Office
or in the British Museum, any of the petitions or proposals mentioned in
this order of the Council, except one small tract \_N~o. 18, vol. 598, sm. Mos,
Kings Pamphlets'], which is, very probably, a printed copy of one of these
proposals. It contains fourteen pages, small quarto, including the title-
page, which reads as follows :
—
"A Declaration Concerning State-Farthings ; or, Certain Remonstrative
Reasons for the allowance thereof; Wherein is comprised, 1 The Honour of
the States vindicated, 2 The Peoples hearts contented, 3 The Common-wealths good propagated, 4 The Relief of the Poor increased. By ThomasDunstervile, Citizen of London. Imprinted for the Author, 1654."
The date of publication, "Aprill ye 6," 1654, is inserted in contempo-
rary handwriting by Thomason, the collector of these pamphlets.
$jjj ftetfow Jf atiljiugs af 1654. 53
The work commences on page 3, with the heading— "A Declaration
concerning the allowance of Brass-Farthings, 8fc." The writer throughout
urges the necessity of state farthings, or a national coinage of authorised
farthings, and begins by discussing the different kinds of metal out of which
it is proposed to make them. The three materials proposed by other persons
were— "1. Pure copper, 2. copper and brasse semented together, 3. tin in-
trinsick," (page 9) ; and each farthing was to consist of as much metal as
would be intrinsically worth a farthing. Dunsterville objects to all these
substances, giving his reasons at length, and offers a new alloy of his own
invention, "made up by art," of which specimens seem to have been sub-
mitted to the Committee of Council for the Mint, for on page 5 he says :
"And such a Mettal (viz: not easy to counterfeit) now lyes before their
Honours relating to the Mint."
On pages 12 and 13 of this pamphlet, Dunsterville gives an account
of the properties of the new metal or alloy invented by him, in these terms
:
"1. It beareth in it two colors, the one a pale fae'd red, imbodied with
Azure throughout, so that it is different from all sorts of mettal in color,
2. It is hard and beautiful like silver, in its own kind. 3. It is in color as
durable as silver. 4. It is much easier to counterfeit silver than the same
mettal ; which last, wel weighed, wil take off the fear of counterfeiting Far-
things, because (I conceive) no man wil counterfeit farthings, that can
counterfeit silver with more ease, provided the State make a penal Order
against it, as in like cases it is for silver and gold."
Concerning himself, the author informs us that he was "bred a Silk-
man, and lived twenty years or thereabouts in Cheap-side, and Paternoster-
Eoe, a Master for my self" (page S).
The proposals of Thomas Dunsterville having been "laid aside" by the
Council's order of the 16th March, 1653-4, no more notice was taken of his
projects during the Protectorate; but Mr. J. H. Burn has published a petition
from Dunsterville to the Parliament which governed after Eichard Crom-
well's resignation, May to October, 1659. In it, Dunsterville prays the
Parliament to make use of his newly invented metal for state farthings, and
to pass an act for their allowance, granting to the petitioner the preparation
of the metal. A paper of reasons annexed to the petition is written in nearly
54 fumisraaia (tomfoilliana.
the same words as his pamphlet of 1654, and need not therefore be repro-
duced here. See pp. lx. et seq. of J. H. Burn's Catalogue of the Beaufoy Col-
lection of Tokens, 2nd edition, London 1855.
There are, however, some of the farthings of 1654 still in existence;
and we will now describe the two pewter farthings of that date which were
actually put into circulation, as we learn from the following passage in a
contemporary newspaper :
—
"Wednesday, 26th April, 1654.— "This night are come out new Far-
things, weighing a quarter of an ounce fine Pewter, which is but the price
of new Pewter ; that so the people may never hereafter fear to loose much
by them ; with the Harp of one side, and a crosse on the other, with T. K.
above it."—Page 3802, No. 239, of Secerall Proceedings of State Affaires.
That the issue of these farthings was unauthorised and contrary to the
wishes of the government, appears from an official notice which was speedily
published, prohibiting their circulation in these terms :
—
" An Advertisement.
"Whereas several persons have presented unto his Highness and his
Councel, divers patterns for the making of a common Farthing for the use
of the Common wealth ; and have attended several times about the same,
and at this day the business is depending before his honourable Councel,
and their pleasure as yet not signified therein. And yet notwithstanding
in the mean time several persons have presumed without any Authority or
Declaration of the State to set the Common-wealth of Englands Arms on a
piece of pewter of the weight of about a quarter of an ounce, and have pro-
cured intimation in Print to be made, that these pewter farthings are allowed
to pass currant through the Common-wealth of England, &c. and in pursuance
thereof, have and do daily vend these unauthorized pewter farthings in Lon-don and other parts of this Commonwealth, to the great deceit and dammageof this Nation.
"These are to give notice to all men, that if there be not a sudden stop
of the making and vending of those pewter farthings, the Commonwealthwill be greatly deceived, both by mixing the Pewter with Lead, and also
every Tinker and other lewd persons will get molds and make the said pew-ter farthings in every corner. Therefore all people ought to take notice that
Mt |£atim fartjjittgs d 1654. 55
no farthings are to pass, but such only as shall be authorized, by his High-
ness and his Councel to pass through the Common-wealth."— Page 3474,
No. 204, oiMercurius Politicus, 4—11th May, 1654.
It will be observed that the latter portion of this extract seems to show
that it was actually the intention of the Protector to issue a properly autho-
rised state farthing, to be legally current over all the nation; and we shall
have more to say on the subject of his pattern farthings under the year 1658.
The above advertisement (now for the first time noticed in any numis-
matic work ) confirms the view that the pewter farthings bearing the initials
T. K. were coined by some private individual, as supposed by Thos. Snelling,
who remarks— "We should almost suspect from the T. K. and the different
cross on this piece, that it might rather belong to a private tradesman."
—
View of the Copper Coin and Coinage of England, 1766, p. 33 note. The Editor
of the second (1780) edition of Gr. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, also
concurs in Snelling's opinion : see appendix, page 79.
There are two varieties of these pewter farthings, apparently from the
same dies, but one has the addition of a sun with long rays over the shield
on the reverse.
No. 1. Obverse, a shield bearing a cross. Above it, a wreath of what
appear to be roses, enclosing the initials T K. Legend— J ovnce . op . fine .
pewte . Eeverse, a similar shield bearing the Irish harp ; a wreath of laurel
above. Legend—FOR . necessary . change. On each side is a beaded inner
circle. Size -9 of an inch in diameter. See illustration, plate ii. no. 4, taken
from a specimen in the British Museum.
No. 2. Nearly similar to no. 1, being from the same dies, but with the
addition of a sun over the centre of the reverse, its rays reaching to the in-
ner circle. See plate ii. no. 5, which is from a coin in the Author's cabinet.
It was the best specimen available, since, although it shows much decay, it
is less corroded than that in the British Museum. On a very fine specimen
sold at Mr. J. B. Bergne's sale, 27th May 1873, lot 874, the eyes, nose, and
mouth could be distinguished on the face of the sun.
The pewter farthing no. 1 is engraved in Gr. Vertue's Works of Thomas
Simon, 1753, plate xxvi. no. 6, and in T. Snelling's View of the Copper Coin
and Coinage of England, plate vi. no. 5. No. 2 is engraved in Folkes's and
Ruding's plates of Silver Coins, plate xxxi. no. 12.
The weight of each of these farthings, according to' the inscription on
the obverse, should be a quarter of an ounce, which, if avoirdupois, would
be 109 grains and a fraction : therefore each farthing ought to weigh about
109 grains troy, but pewter being a metal which corrodes very quickly when
exposed to the air, most of the pewter farthings that now exist are very much
lighter from this cause. A corroded specimen of No. 2, in the British Mu-
seum Cabinet, weighs 102 grains, so that when new it may very possibly
have weighed, as well as the other examples, the necessary amount of 109
grains, or a quarter of an ounce.
We have been unable to discover what name is represented by the ini-
tials T. K. on the obverse of these pewter farthings. The fullest explanation
hitherto given is that they are the initials of some private trader, as before
mentioned, but none of the London traders' tokens of the period afford any
clue. There was a T. K., viz : Thomas Kencie, who lived in Southampton
Buildings, Holborn, and issued a half-penny token, but what his trade was
we do not know. The only other London trader issuing tokens, who had for
his initials T. K., was Thomas Knight. He was a baker, and it is therefore
improbable that he should have projected the coinage of national farthings.
But, without further evidence, it is impossible to identify this T. K.
The pewter farthings of 1654 having been peremptorily suppressed by
the above quoted notice of the Protector's Council, it is only to be expected
that few specimens should have come down to our times. This is actually
the case, and both varieties of these farthings are rare, especially when in
fair preservation. No. 1 is the rarest of the two.
Before leaving this subject it may be useful to give a brief list of some
pattern farthings, which, judging from their similarity of type and execu-
tion, were probably made about the same time and by the same person as
the pewter farthings of 1654. They also bear the English and Irish shields
of arms (the form of the cross varying slightly), with similar wreaths above,
and have the same inscription on the reverse
—
for necessary change. Thelegend on the obverse, England's earthing, shows that they were patterns
for a national or state farthing, doubtless made by one of the persons whosent in the proposals referred to in the Council's order of March 16, 1653-4.
Pattern Farthings of uncertain date.— No. 1. Obverse, a shield bearing
St. (ieorge's cross; a laurel wreath above. Legend
—
englands . farthing.
©§« fatljw facings b! 1654. 57
Reverse, a shield bearing the Irish harp ; also with a laurel wreath above.
Legend—FOR . necessary . change. There are beaded inner circles on both
sides. Size -9 inch in diameter. A rubbed copper specimen in the British
Museum weighs 80 grains. Engraved by Gr. Vertue, Works of Thomas Simon,
plate xxvi. no. 5.
No. 2. Obverse and reverse exactly similar in type to no. l,but smaller
in size. Diameter "8 inch. A copper one in the British Museum weighs 57
grains. It is of good work, and well preserved.
No. 3. Obverse and reverse similar to no. 1, but reading CHANS (instead
of change ) on the reverse. There is also a lozenge after each word in the
legends. Diameter *8 inch. This farthing is of good work, and is struck
in copper. A well preserved example in the British Museum weighs 69J
grains. Another copper specimen was in Mr. J. B. Bergne's sale, 27th May
1873, lot 871, £1 8s. Engraved by Vertue, plate xxvi. no. 4, and in Iblkes'
and Ending's plate xxxi. no. 15, but in these engravings the lozenges are not
properly represented.
No. 4. Obverse, shield and laurel wreath as on No. 1. Legend
—
eng-
lands . earthing : Reverse, also with shield and wreath as on the reverse
of No. 1. Legend
—
for . necessary . chang. On each side is a double inner
and outer circle, one of each pair being beaded, the other a plain line. The
diameter of this pattern is •! inch ; and it is struck in brass, with a copper
stud in the centre. A fairly preserved specimen in the British Museum
weighs 5 If grains. In the Martin and Murchison sales was a pattern in
brass, similar to No. 4, but reading FARTHIN. on the obverse.
No. 5. Obverse, a shield bearing St. George's cross ; a laurel wreath
above. Legend—englandS farthing. Reverse, a shield bearing the Irish
harp ; also with a laurel wreath above it. Legend—FOR necessary CHAN.
There are no dots between the words of the inscriptions. Inside of the wreath
on each side is the letter K. There is also a beaded inner circle on each side.
Diameter '85 inch. Brass, with a copper stud in the centre. A fairly preser-
ved specimen in the British Museum weighs 106J grains. One was in the
Pembroke cabinet, see the plates, part iv. tab. 20. A very fine specimen,
also brass with a large copper stud in the centre, formed lot 870 in Mr. J. B.
Bergne's sale, 27th May 1873, and sold for £2 12s. In the sale catalogue
58 jgumiumatB (BtJirmfoiHiattK.
of Mr. E. Hawkins' collection, lot 26, is described one of these farthings
(apparently), but it is said to have R. for Rawlins within each wreath. This
must, however, be a mistake for K.
No. 6. Obverse, a shield bearing St. George's cross ; a laurel wreath
above. Legend—ENttLANDS FARDIN. Eeverse, a shield bearing the Irish harp,
also with a laurel wreath above it. Legend—FOR NECESSARY CHA. A beaded
inner circle on each side. Diameter '8 inch. This pattern is of good work,
and is made of some white metal : perhaps that invented by Dunsterville,
mentioned above. A well preserved specimen in the British Museum weighs
70-8 grains. [Engraved in T. Snelling's Copper Coinage, plate vi. no. 4.]
One of these patterns no. 6 occurred in brass and copper, at Mr. Bergne's
sale, lot 869, £1 16s., very fine.
No. 7. Exactly similar to No. 6 in types and inscriptions, but smaller
in size, its diameter being -7 inch. One in brass, badly preserved, is in the
British Museum, weight 72J grains.
All the seven farthings described above appear to have been executed
by one man, the same who also engraved the pewter farthings with "T.K."
Farthing No. 5 even has the latter initial, K, upon it, probably denoting the
same person as T. K., and that it was done by him. He must have been
some private manufacturer, like Dunsterville, and not any one connected
with the Mint, since there was no moneyer or workman in the Mint with
those initials at this period (see list of moneyers on pp. 40, 41 of T. Violet''s
Answer of the Corporation of Moniers, 8fc., London 1653).
INCLUDING THE YEAES 1656—1657.
CHAPTEE III.
PETEIl BLONDEAU AND THE IRISH MINT.
Before printing the documents relating to Peter Blondeau and the work
he did for the proposed Irish Mint in the years 1654 and 1655, it seems
advisable to give the reader some account of what we have ascertained regar-
ding Blondeau's previous proceedings, especially as his name and inventions
will be frequently mentioned in the subsequent pages of this work. It would
also be difficult to separate one subject from the other : his connection with
the projected Irish Mint arising out of the steps taken by the government
to test his improved method of coining.
According to George Vertue(Works of T. Simon, edit. 1753, p. 17), the
Council of State and the House of Commons, having had it represented to
them that the coins of this country might be more perfectly and beautifully
made, equal to any of the coins of Europe, proposed to send to France for
Peter Blondeau, a native of that country, who had invented and brought to
perfection certain improved machinery for striking money of equal sizes and
shapes, having a beautiful polish, and with graining or inscriptions on the
edges ; thus preventing the clipping of the current coins, and the counter-
feiting of them to any extent.
Blondeau appears to have been a man of respectable position and some
private fortune. He is generally styled "gentleman" in the official docu-
ments, and we shall find that, in making pattern pieces and in bringing
forward his inventions, he spent considerable sums which he never recovered.
Blondeau's own account of his invitation to England runs thus : " The
Honourable Councell of State had prudently resolved to have the money
well Coyned, if they could but meet with an excellent Workman to have the
conduct of that Work : A year since (i. e. about June 1649) I had notice of
it, whereupon I sent hither (to London) some Paterns of Coyn, which were
esteemed and approoved of by the said Honourable Councell of State, which
occasioned my comming into England."— Peter Blondeau's Proposals to the
Parliament, June 1650, folio sheet in the British Museum.
62 fjunmmata (BtrirrafoulHattB.
In another publication, he says: "The Council of State....having seen
the patterns of coyn made after a new Invention by the said Blondeau, and
having treated by Letters about the quantitie of pieces that could bee coy-
ned in a week, and what they might cost ; the said Council caused the said
Blondeau the Inventor of that way of coyning, to com to London, to treat
with him by word of mouth, and to agree about the price of coyning the
monie of this Common-wealth after his way. Hee beeing then arrived at
London the 3. of Septemb. 1649. the said Council bestowed on him 401 ster-
ling, and the late Mr. Frost, then Secretarie to the said Council, told him
before Witnesses, that if the State could not agree with him about the price,
and that therefore hee should bee necessitated to retire himself, the State
would indamnifie him for his journie, both coming and returning, and for
the time hee should have lost, and would bestow on him such a present,
that hee would return satisfied."—Pages 8, 9 ofA Most Humble Memorandum
frotiV Peter Blondeau, small octavo pamphlet in the British Museum.
It does not appear that he was ever repaid the expense of his journey
to this country, the forty pounds given to him by the Council ( by their
order of the 11th September, 1649) being only an indemnification for the
loss of his clothes and other personal effects, which were seized by a pirate
when he was crossing the sea from France.
Blondeau states, in his above-mentioned Proposals to the Parliament,
that he was "very curteously entertained" by the Council, but that Dr. Gruer-
dain, Master of the Mint, endeavoured to drive him back to France, telling
him that if he "was come to be an Officer of the Mint, they were already
too many, and that the Workmen were more than they had need for the
Coyning of their Money, which they would doe so well, that the State
would be satisfied."
About this time, in the latter part of the year 1649, the well-known
Commonwealth coins of that date, with the usual type, were coined. It is
not known who engraved the dies, but they were certainly not done bySimon. The rude execution and uneven sizes of these pieces evidently
caused general dissatisfaction, so that the Council of State were induced to
make the following order :
—
At the Council of State at Whitehall, Saturday, 2nd February, 1649-50.—" Ordered That it be referred to the Committee of the Mint to consider
how the moneys of the Commonwealth may be better made, and that they
r
§tUv ilun^au. 63
call unto them Monsr Blondeau, and conferre with him, and consider what
use may be made of him and his skill about coyning ; or if there can be no
use made of him, that he might not attend any longer."
—
Certified copy an-
nexed to Peter Blondeau's Petition of list April 1654, Domestic State Papers
in the Public Eecord Office.
Blondeau's petition and proposals were also referred to the consideration
of the Committee of Council for the Mint*, who accordingly discussed his
inventions at length, but the Master and Corporation of the Mint were so
successful in their opposition, that nothing was done all that year, 1650.
Much annoyed at having remained nine months in England, " at a great
charge, doing nothing," Blondeau published a folio sheet of proposals ad-
dressed u To the Parliament of the Common-wealth of England." It consists
of seventy-two long lines of small print, and forms a portion of the collection
made by the contemporary bookseller Thomason, who has written upon it
the date of publication, "June 1650."
Blondeau, in this document, commences by referring to the evils occa-
sioned by the counterfeiting, clipping, and transporting of the current coin.
He then mentions his coming to England, at the invitation of the Council,
who wished to prevent these evils. He states that the officers of the Mint
have hindered him as much as they could, although the Council had ordered
that his Proposition betaken into consideration, which Proposition is: "by
a new Invention of mine, to make a handsomer Coyne, than it can be found
in all the world besides, vis. That shall not only be Stamped on both Flat-
sides, but shall even be marked with Letters upon the thicknesse of the
Brim, whereby the Counterfeiting, Casting, and Clipping of the Coyne shall
be prevented." Blondeau then describes some of the proceedings of the peo-
ple in the Mint to discourage him : the Master of the Mint " hath told mehimself in plaine tearms, That he would doe his utmost to hinder myProposition ; and for that end he hath brought in an Irish Lock Smith, one
David Rammage, a man ill-affected to the present Government, who hath
been Servant formerly [to] the late deceased Master Briot, for whom he
forged his Tools, and marked his Brasse Counters."
Blondeau next adverts to certain offers made by the Moneyers, and says
that their prices were put very low, in order to discourage him and make
him go home, when they would return to their old ways. He says that the
* Appointed 16th August, 1649; see list of names on p. 161 of T. Violet's "Mysteries," &c, 1653.
64 fJumiumaiK IBtffrafosUiaBB.
moneyers have tried to imitate his patterns, and to discover his secrets, but
without the slightest success. He then offers to make the money by his
new invention "for the very self-same price" as the officers of the Mint
have demanded, although his method is " more difficult and chargeable."
The price being five shillings for each pound weight of gold, and twelve
pence for each pound of silver, the State to furnish the gold and silver in
plate, with all the expenses and maintenance of the machines, tools, gravers,
and all other necessary small charges. He concludes by offering to make
proof of what he states without charge to the nation.
Another paper was issued by Blondeau, probably later on in the same
year, 1650, although it has no date upon it. It is printed on a small folio
sheet of paper, and the only copy known to us is preserved in the Public
Eecord Office, Interregnum Letters and Papers No. 820,fo. 463a. It is headed
:
"An answer to severall objections made against Peter Blondeau his way of Coin-
ing the Money; and the difference betwixt his Coyn, and that which is made with
the Hammer." Blondeau first answers the objection of some persons that
his coins can be counterfeited. He says that the machines for making them
are too large and heavy, and too difficult to construct. His process is also
too expensive, and requires too.many workmen, for any ordinary person to
be able to counterfeit his productions, as they do the hammered money.
He says that his money cannot be successfully moulded and cast, nor can it
be clipped without taking away the letters or graining on the edge, thereby
causing immediate detection. He concludes by describing how pieces with
inscribed edges cannot be successfully or expeditiously made in the Tower
Mint by the old methods.
In 1651 more active measures were taken regarding Peter Blondeau's
petitions and proposals. On the 1st May, 1651, the Committee for the Mint
made the following resolution :
—
"Eesolved upon the Question that the Patterns of Coyne offered by the
ffrenchman, with Letters upon the Edges, is a better fashion of money, then
the present fashion of the money of England : And is for the honor and
great advantage of the Commonwealth : Provided the sa Coyne be made at
a moderate charge.
" James Harrington." *
*Copy annexed to P. Blondeau's Petition of 21st April 1654, Domestic State Papers.
l§tUv §Uu\ltUU. 65
The value of Blondeau's invention having thus been formally recognised
by the Committee, the moneyers at the Mint became very jealous :" The
Master, the Officers, and the workmen of the Mint told the Committee, it
was not likely the said Blondeau had don himself the pieces sent by him to
the Council of State. Besides, that it was an old Invention, which they knew
themselves, and that such pieces were onely made for curiositie, with very
long time and great expence, and that it was impossible that that waie
might bee used about the ordinarie coyn, which is thin. They desired that
the said Blondeau might bee commanded to make a trial of his skill by ma-
king som other pieces, and that they would do as much as the said Blondeau.
Therefore the said Committee ordered both the said Blondeau and the. said
workmen to make their patterns and Propositions respectively ; and that be
that would make it with most advantage to the State should have the Im-
ployment."—Pages 10, 11, of P. Blondeau's Most Humble Memorandum.
With regard to the statement of the moneyers, that Blondeau's was an
old invention, it appears that the coining-press or mill was known to Ben-
venuto Cellini (see Trattato delV Orificeria, cap. ix.) in the sixteenth century,
and it was introduced into France by Aubry Olivier about 1553. It was not,
however, until March, 1645, that coinage by the hammer was entirely sup-
pressed in that country. (See pp. 507 et seqq., lecture by M. E. Chalon, t. v.
s. 5, Revue de la Numismatique Beige) . In England the coining-press, or mill
and screw, was introduced by a Frenchman, named Mestrelle, in the reign
of Elizabeth. Milled six-pences of this queen are extant dated 1561 and
following years; but after 1575 we meet with no more milled coins until
Blondeau's time.
The following are the two orders of the Committee of the Mint,
directing that trial pieces should be made by Eamage, on behalf of the
Moneyers of the Mint, and by Peter Blondeau, in support of his proposals
and representations :
—
"Whitehall, May 8, 1651.— At the Committee of the Mint, for the
Tryall betweene Barid Rammadg and Peter Blondeau. It is Ordered that
they make patterns to present the Committee, with this motto, riz. Truth
and Peace. 1651. The Impression The States Amies, as upon a xx.s. peece.
Two of the same in silver, for a halfe-Crowne peece.
" Two of the same peeces are to bee made with graining about the edges
without the Motto.
66 fjitmismafa ©Uflmfoelliana.
" The Monyers are to give in their Propositions upon Thursday the
third of July. The French-man is to make the like, and present to this
Committee on the same day, or sooner." James Harrington."
[See pages 173-4 of T. Violet's Mysteries and Secrets of Trade and Mint
Affairs, London 1653. After the above follows another order, directing
Simon to deliver up to Eamage two rollers and a drawing-mill.]
Friday, 9th May, 1651.— "At the Committee of the Councill of State
for the ordering of the Mint, sitting at Whitehall.— Ordered That Peter
Blondeau shall make the proofs of his Invention for coyning of the moneys,
and shall bring the peeces made by him to this Committee upon Thursday
the third of July next or sooner, together with bis Proposition : And that
for that end he shall be authorised to make use of such Engins and Instru-
ments necessary thereunto, as are at present in the custody of Mr Simons
the Graver of the Mint. And shall worke either at the sd Simons his house,
or at any such house or place, as the sd Blondeau shall thinke most conve-
nient for his worke. And for so doing this Order shall be a sufficient
Warrant unto him.
"James Harrington.
" Gilb. Pickering
.
,,%
On the 14th June, this Warrant was issued to Eamage:
—
"White-Hall the 14 June 1651.
"Mr. David Eamadge,
" These are to authorize you, to make some patterns as broad as
a shilling, a half-crown, a twenty shillings peece of gold, in a mill ; and if
you can doe it with letters about the edge, or other wayes, according to
Queen Elizabeths patterns of mill-money, or any other modells or peeces youare to make, That so the Committee of the Mint may see your severall
peeces, and thereupon consider what is fittest to present to the Councell
of State, for the more handsome making of the monies for the honor of
this Common-Wealth.
" James Harrington.
" Tho. Chaloner." f
* Copy annexed to P. Blondeau' s Petition of 21st April 1654, Domestic State Papers,
t Page 20 of T. Violet's " Answer of the Corporation of Moniers," London 1653.
r
§jUt- flflttiJSEU. 67
Ramage and Blondeau accordingly set to work upon their trial pieces
;
and, on the 4th July, the Mint Committee, no doubt supposing that Blon-
deau's patterns were finished, made the following order :
—
"Whitehall, July the 4* 1651.— At the Committee of the Councill of
State for the Mint.— Ordered That Peter Blondeau and Thomas Simons,
chiefe Graver of the Mint, attend this Committee by eight of the clock to
morrow morning, and bring with them all the peeces stamped newly by the
sd Blondeau, together with all the Dice [Dies] used by him in that worke.
Hereof they are not to faile.
" James Harrington.
"Fran: Allan?'*
The mention of Simon in this order seems to show that he supplied
Blondeau with the engraved dies.
Eamage's and Blondeau's pattern pieces were duly delivered to the
Chairman of the Committee, Sir James Harrington, on the 3d July, 1651
;
and they remained for some time in the custody of the Committee, for their
consideration. About May, 1653, Sir J. Harrington delivered Ramage's
patterns to Thomas Violet, and he gave them back to the moneyers of the
Mint (see p. 175 of T. Violet's Mysteries and Secrets, &c.)
The trial pieces made by David Ramage, on behalf of the Corporation
of the Moneyers of the Mint, were only about a dozen in number (according
to Blondeau's Most Humble Memorandum, p. 13), and, although most of them
are still preserved, they are very rare and bear a high price. T. Snelling
enumerates eight pieces only as being known to him in 1769,f and we can-
not now add more than two or three to that number.
Ramage's Half-crown has on the Obverse : a shield bearing St. George's
cross, encircled by a wreath formed of two laurel branches. Legend—THE .
common . wealth . OF .ENGLAND. Reverse, an angel holding up the conjoined
shields of England and Ireland, one shield bearing St. George's cross, and
the other the Irish harp. Legend
—
gavrded .with .angeles. 1651. There
is an inner circle, formed like a cord, within the legend on each side. Dia-
meter of the coin : 1-25 inches. The edge is one-tenth of an inch wide, and
bears the inscription
—
trvth and peace 1651, with four mullets, one after
* Copy annexed to P. Blondeau's Petition of 21st April 1654.
t See p. 51 of his "View of Pattern Pieces."
68 §umi?mafa ©MrafojllianH.
each word and after the date. The specimen in the British Museum, rather
rubbed, weighs 289*5 grains troy.
Homage's Shilling : exactly like the half-crown, having been struck from
the same dies. The shilling is, however, very much thinner, and has the
edge milled with straight lines. A fine specimen in the British Museum
weighs 94 grains.
Eamage's Six-pence No. 1. Obverse, a shield bearing St. George's cross.
Legend
—
trvth and peace, with a mullet after each word. Eeverse, a shield
bearing the Irish harp. Legend and three mullets as on the obverse. Abeaded inner circle on each side of the coin. Diameter : -85 of an inch. It
is of the same thickness as the half-crown, and has the edge inscribed
—
TRVTH and peace 1651, with a mullet after each word, in just the same
manner. A very fine specimen in the British Museum weighs 126 -6 grains.
Ramage's Six-pence No. 2 : exactly similar to six-pence no. 1, except
that the edge is ornamented with (22) pierced mullets all round, instead of
the motto and date. It is also slightly thicker. The specimen in the British
Museum, not so well preserved as no. 1, weighs 162 grains.
Ramage's Gold Pattern. In the British Museum is a very fine pattern
piece, struck in gold, from the same dies as Eamage's six-pence no. 1. It
has the same inscription on the edge, and is of the same diameter and thick-
ness. It weighs 215*5 grains, or about 5J grains more than three ten-shilling
pieces of the period. No gold pieces by Eamage had come to light in Snel-
ling's time, 1769.
There also exists a pattern farthing in copper, evidently made by
Eamage at some later period. It is similar in type to his six-pence no. 1,
and of the same size, but it is from different dies, and has the edge plain.
Engraved in Snelling's Copper Coinage, plate vi. no. 6.
With regard to these patterns by Eamage, Violet (Answer of the Corpo-
ration of Moniers, p. 21) considered that they were better than Blondeau's,
but very few persons who have compared them are now likely to be of that
opinion. Blondeau says that h?s rival's patterns were made " after the old
way," and that some big pieces of silver were " stuffed within with copper."
(Most Humble Memorandum, p. 11.) On the other hand, Violet alleges that
Blondeau's patterns were plated. But, upon examination of the specimens
in the British Museum, it was found that both Eamage's and Blondeau's
silver pieces were of standard silver throughout. Their specific gravities
WtUv lluntisau. 69i>'
were obligingly ascertained by Dr. W. Flight, of the Museum. Blondeau,
in his Most Humble Remonstrance, 1653, thus defends himself from the charge
that his patterns were plated :— " Essay [assay] hath been made at Grold-
smith's-hall and in the Tower of the Patterns of Coin made by the said
Blondeau ; and they have been found of the same silver and goodness, or a
little better than the ordinarie Coin ought to bee, and of the same Silver
within, as they are without."
A mere glance at any of Eamage's pattern pieces will show that both
their design and execution are far inferior to those of the undoubted works
of Thomas Simon. Who actually engraved the dies of Eamage's patterns
has been a question, but we have no doubt that Eamage himself did them.
Snelling, however, in his View of Pattern Pieces p. 51, suggests John East
as their engraver.
Blondeau, in his Most Humble Memorandum, points out several defects
in Eamage's patterns, and says that, although they had the use of the coin-
ing implements that were already in the Tower mint, the Corporation of the
Moneyers, in making the dozen trial pieces called Eamage's, expended £100
in new tools and other costs of coinage. In Violet's Answer, etc. p. 37, the
Moneyers acknowledge that they only made a dozen pattern pieces, but say
that they can, if commanded, strike many thousands with the same tools.
With reference to Blondeau's allegation that their patterns had cost the
State £100, they submit an account for the making of patterns in July,
August, and September, 1651, upon the trial with "Peter Blondeau the
Frenchman." The portion relating to Eamage's patterns is as follows :
—
"Inprimis in fitting of tooles and instruments for the work . £50 . Os.Od."In Gold and Silver for making of the tryall 11. is . 3d.
" Expended by the Moniers at severall times, when they wai-
ted upon the Committee of the Mint in the tryall . . 26 . 14.s . 2d.
Total— £87 . 18s . U.
The name of David Eamage is no. 44 of the Moneyers in the "List of
Fellow Moneyers and Labourers of the Mint in January, 1652," printed by
Violet on pages 40, 41 of the Ansicer of the Corporation of Moniers, etc.
Having fully described the pattern pieces made by Eamage, we must
now turn to those of his rival, Blondeau. All the specimens of the latter at
present known are in silver, although we have Blondeau's own statement
that he made some in gold.
70 fumisraafa (Brirratoilliaiu.
Blondeau's Half-crown No. 1 . Obverse, a shield.bearing St. George's
cross, surrounded by a palm and laurel wreath. Mint-mark, sun. Legend
—
THE . COMMONWEALTH . OF . ENGLAND . Reverse, the two shields of England
and Ireland conjoined; with the numerals II. VI (for 2s. 6d. ) above. All
within a beaded inner circle. Legend—GOB . WITH . VS . 1651 . The edge
bears the following inscription in relief
—
trvth . and . peace .1651 PETRVS
.
blond^vs . inventor . FECIT. A palm branch after 1651, and after FECIT.
Diameter of the coin : 1-3 inches. A very fine specimen in the British Mu-
seum weighs 232-3 grains. The inscription on the edge must not be taken
to mean that Blondeau engraved the dies, but that he made or struck the
coin, and did the edging.
Blondeau's Half-crown No. 2. The. obverse and reverse are from the
same dies as no. 1, but the edge is inscribed— IN . the . THIRD . yeare . OF .
freedome . by . gods . blessing . restored . 1651 . A very fine specimen in
the British Museum weighs 233 -3 grains.
Blondeau's Shilling. Similar in type to the half-crowns, but with the
numerals xn (for 12c?.) above the shields on the reverse. The edge is milled
with straight lines. Diameter of the coin: 1-05 inches. A fine specimen
in the British Museum weighs 92*7 grains.
Blondeau's Six-pence. Also similar to the half-crowns, but with " VI " on
the reverse. Diameter : -9 of an inch. Edge milled with straight lines.
One in the British Museum, very fine, weighs 46 -3 grains.
It will be noticed that the weights of these pieces are not so irregular
as those of Ramage's patterns, being in fact nearly the same as the stan-
dard weights of the current coins of the period. All Blondeau's patterns are
beautifully finished, and, both as regards the engraving of the dies and the
perfection of the coining process, are far in advance of anything previously
done in England. The beauty of their execution shows that the dies were
engraved by Thomas Simon ; several of the characteristics of his work, such
as the fine frosting of the St. George's crosses, may be plainly perceived.
Mr. Cuff and Mr. B. Nightingale were both of opinion that these patterns
were the work of T. Simon, as " the work is in every respect so like Simon's,
the same hand so easily traceable throughout, that the most experienced and
practical numismatists entertain no question as to the dies having been en-
graved by Simon." (Numismatic Chronicle, 0. s. vol. iv. p. 218.) Even if we
were unable to recognize Simon's work on these coins, the mention of him
together with Blondeau in the Mint Committee's order of the 4th July 1651,
printed above, would be almost sufficient to establish the fact. From this
order it appears that Simon was engaged in producing these patterns, to-
gether with Blondeau. Simon supplied the engraved dies ready for stamping,
while Blondeau's portion of the work was to bring the blanks to an equal
size and thickness, to strike them from dies already prepared for him, and
to edge them with legends or graining; all of which processes he performed
by his newly invented (or newly introduced) machines.
Each one of Blondeau's patterns has the equal size, roundness, and
evenness of relief which he claimed for them, and many examples retain to
this day their fine polish and gloss. Blondeau states that he made about
three hundred pieces of his pattern coins, chiefly in half-crowns, shillings,
and six-pences, but " some gold pieces." He delivered all of them, together
with his Proposition, to Sir James Harrington, Chairman of the Committee
of Council for the Mint. Harrington took them to the Council of State
when he made his report to it, and the coins were nearly all taken by mem-
bers of the Council and of the Parliament, so that very few remained in his
hands, and Blondeau had great difficulty in getting the remainder of the
pieces returned to him.—See MS. annexed to P. Blondeau's Petition of the
21st April 1654, Interregnum State Papers.
It appears from a statement of Violet's (p. 21 of the Answer, etc.), that
Blondeau made his patterns in a private house in the Strand, doubtless in
order to prevent the mint officers from discovering his secrets. The moneyers
thereupon endeavoured to bring a charge of treason against him for coining,
but apparently without success. As Blondeau had, in his Proposals to the
Parliament, June, 1650, offered to make proof of his inventions without
charge to the State, it seems that all his three hundred pattern pieces were
made at his own expense, especially as we have not been able to find any
claim on the government for their cost, nor any record of the Parliament
having paid for them.
There is thus a great contrast in this trial. Eamage makes only a dozen
roughly executed patterns, at a cost to the nation of £87, while Blondeau
delivers in three hundred pieces, superior in every way, without any charge.
The reader will recollect that, together with their patterns, each party
was to deliver to the Mint Committee a written Proposition for coining
72 guiimnt&fa GnrmfonUiBna.
current money in a similar manner. The moneyers did not present any
proposition at that time (p. 11 of Blondeau's Most Mumble Memorandum),
but they had previously, on the 28th February, 1650-1, drawn up a paper
entitled : " The humble Proposition of the Provost and Moniers of the States
Mint in the Tower of London," addressed to Sir James Harrington. It is
printed on pages 22 and 23 of T. Violet's Answer of the Corporation of Mo-
niers, etc. The moneyers herein offer to make coins equal to Blondeau's,
" as exactly as any French-man in the world, and at a cheaper price than
the French-man hath offered;" and they state that they receive at present
9d. per pound, Troy weight, for silver struck with the hammer, but they
offer to make "fair mill-monie" for I2d. per pound. Also that they now
have 2s. 5d. per pound weight for coining gold, and that the State has 15s.
for the coinage, but that they will undertake to make "fair mill-gold, as
fair as the gold coynes in France, for 5s. the pound weight."
Blondeau states (p. 11 of his Most Humble Memorandum) that he pre-
sented his Proposition at the same time as his patterns, viz : in July 1651,
and that, after some alterations, " it was received and accepted of by the
whole Committee, who ordered it to be reported to the Council of State,
according to the order of the said Council."
It is difficult to determine, with any certainty, which of the documents
now remaining was the Proposition presented by Blondeau to the Committee
of the Mint in July 1651. We however believe that an unpublished manu-
script in the Public Eecord Office (Interregnum Letters and Papers No. 815J
is the original or a copy of it. It is not dated, but has the indorsement
:
" Peter Blondeau's last Proposition." From the mention in it of the Parlia-
ment, it must have been written before the dissolution in April 1653 ; and
there appears to us no reason why this document should not be the Proposi-
tion delivered to the Committee in July 1651. It is apparently written by
a clerk, in a minute hand, on two pages, quarto size, but has Blondeau's
autograph signature at the end. It commences thus :
—
"Peter Blondeau's Proposition concerning the Coyne, humbly presented
to the Honorable Committee for the Mint.
" I doe offer to coyne the money of this Commonwealth, according unto
the patterns I have lately made here by order of the Committee for the Mint,
which can neither be moulded, nor clipped, viz. both Gold and Silver marked
on both flatt sides and upon the thicknesse or edge to the six pence inclusive,
for the price of 16 pence the pound Troy of Silver, and for 7 shelings the
pound Troy of Gold : the State affording unto me the Gold and Silver cast
into plate of the necessary biggnesse and length, cleane and ready to worke,
as also the stamps or dyes ready graved and polished and fitt for the
presses."
Blondeau goes on to say that he would only charge the State for the
first cost of the tools and machines, keeping them in repair, and replacing
broken and worn out ones at his own expense. He would also find the
wood and coals, and bear the loss of the second melting, and of melting
down the clippings, etc. He estimates that all the charges of melting the
plate and making it ready for work, would be ten-pence per pound troy for
gold, and three half-pence per pound for silver, at which price he offers to
undertake it. He then states that
—
" To furnish the Mint with stamps or dyes ready for the presse, which
ought to be done by the ablest in the art of graving, to avoyd counterfeit-
ing ; for the forging, softning, filing, sinking, graving, hardning, and polish-
ing ; together with all necessarys there unto, as iron, Steele, coales, and all
manner of utensills, will cost two pence for the pound troy of gold, and one
penny for the pound troy of silver. And in case the Graver be not willing
to undertake it at that rate, I doe offer to undertake it my selfe, and to im-
ploy and pay what Graver the State please to admit of."
This paragraph appears to prove that Blondeau could not engrave dies
himself. In continuation of this Proposition, he calculates that the clear
profit to the nation from the coinage of bullion will be seven shillings on
every pound troy of gold, and five-pence halfpenny on every pound of
silver. Only four or five officers would be required, and all the tools and
machines for coining £10,000 worth of silver weekly could be provided for
£1,000. For £400 more Blondeau would erect the necessary buildings for
coining weekly the before-named amount of silver. In order that the State
may be certain that he could do what he proposes, he offers to make trial
at the Mint, at his own expense and risk. He does not require to have
the custody or disposal of the bullion, and he would employ only such
workmen as are approved by the Committee of the Mint. He then notices
the methods of inscribing the edges of coins
—
" There be two different ways to make the pieces marked about the
thicknesse or edge. One is auncient, knowne to several! men, and according
whereunto David Eamage, workeman of the Mint, hath made some bigg
pieces ; but that way is very tedious, requireth much time, spoyles abon-
dance of stamps and engines, and cannot be done upon the currant money,
which is thynne. And that is the reason why in France, for making of
those bigg pieces, they pay a crowne for the ounce of gold, and half a
crowne for the ounce of silver, I say for the ounce. As touching the new
way, which is ready and expeditious, and can be used upon the thynne
and currant money, I am the Inventor of it, and only I knowe itt, as I
can make appeare'by experiences, if it be the pleasure of the State to
imploy me."*
Blondeau further beseeches that an Act of Parliament may be passed,
prohibiting any one from using his new invention for twenty-one years,
except himself or his assigns, and fixing the prices and terms for his pro-
posed coinage. His reward he leaves to the pleasure of the Parliament.
He concludes by stating that the hammered coins made since the establish-
ment of the Commonwealth have cost much more than they would have
cost if coined by his process.
Nothing appears to have been done regarding this Proposition, and ac-
cordingly Blondeau, about October in the same year (1651), published
another statement of the benefits that would be received from the use of
his inventions, entitled :" The humble Representation of Peter Blondeau, as a
Warning, touching severall disorders happening by Monie ill-favoredly Coined,
and the only meanes to prevent them." It is reprinted in T. Yiolet's Answer
of the Corporation of Moniers, etc., pages 4 to 10, inclusive. Blondeau com-
mences by describing the evils to which the hammered coins are liable,
such as clipping, and the practice of culling, or picking out the heaviest of
these unequal-sized coins;pointing out also the ease with which pieces so
badly struck could be imitated. He urges that every coin ought to be
issued of the exact full weight and size, as is done in his own process ; and
then he goes on to refute the objections to his invention, in nearly similar
terms to his Answer to severall objections, etc., noticed above (p, 64) under
the year 1650. He describes the thieves' practice of washing, which, he
says, cannot be safely practised on his coins, because they would at once
* The earliest coin with a legend on the edge is a, pied-fort of Charles IX of France,
1573. A very fine specimen may be seen in the British Museum. The first piece struck
in this country with an inscribed edge is the gold coronation medal of Charles I. by Briot.
^thi Slohittr. 75
lose their beautiful polish and gloss. The hammered money can be coined
with very small implements, but Blondeau's only with many and large
" engines." He accuses the officers of the Mint of culling the heaviest
coins for their private profit, and of other dishonest practices. Although
he had been two years in England, and the Mint officers had been con-
tinually endeavouring to discover his secret, they had completely failed.
He concludes by offering to make coins like his patterns, marked on both
sides and on the rim, for eight shillings* per pound weight in gold (which
is the same as the State then paid for hammered gold coins), and for sixteen
pence per pound weight in silver (the hammered silver money costing
fourteen pence). In these prices the government was to pay for melting
the metal and for engraving the dies ; but Blondeau would pay the other
general expenses, including the wages of the workmen and the cost of the
machinery.
On the 18th November, 1651, the officers of the Mint drew up an
answer to this Representation of Blondeau's. It is headed :" The Provost
and Moniers Answer to the Objections of Peter Blondeau" and is signed by
Symon Corbet, Provost, and thirty-six of the moneyers."f They say that
the trial of the pix effectually prevents such frauds in the fineness and
weight of the money as Blondeau accuses them of ; and they " affirm the
money of gold and silver delivered out of the Tower of London the most
exact for the weight and fineness in the world." The moneyers also repre-
sent that the abuse of culling and meltiDg the coin is not caused by the
inequality of the coining process, as Blondeau affirms, but by the uneven-
ness of the raising of the price of silver. They state that in the five years,
1640 to 1645, they have coined for the Parliament about six millions of
silver, and cleared their account to a penny. They further contend that
their gold and silver patterns with letters on the edge are " more fair and
exacter " than Peter Blondeau's pieces. They state that Blondeau, in his
first proposition, demanded fourteen shillings per pound weight for coining
gold, and twenty pence per pound for silver ; but we cannot find so high a
* Seven shillings only was demanded in the manuscript Proposition last noticed. Still
less was asked in Blondeau's former proposals of June, 1650 (see pp. 63, 64, above), viz :
five shillings for gold, and twelve pence for silver per pound ; but the State was then to pay
the expenses of machinery, etc.
+ Printed on pp. 25—29 of T. Violet's "Answer of the Corporation of Moniers."
76 gUmismata (CrnmmHlioEE.
price named in any of Blondeau's documents now extant. The moneyers
offer, in conclusion, to make money like their patterns, exactly rounded,
and with a double graining, for ten pence per pound weight for silver, and
three shillings per pound for gold, all " by way of the hammer ;" and they
have delivered in a Proposition to bear all charges, except for the coining
irons, at fourteen pence per pound for silver, and four shillings for gold,
also by the hammer.
Nothing seems to have been done all through the next year, 1652, but
in January, 1652-3, Peter Blondeau issued a small printed pamphlet of
eight leaves, small octavo, entitled :"A most humble Memorandum from
Peter Blondeau, etc." It is very scarce, but a copy is in the British Museum,
and it was reprinted in T. Violet's Answer of the Corporation of Moniers in
the Mint, folio, London, 1653, on pages 11 to 20, inclusive. The first page
sets forth that the Memorandum is concerning the offers made by Blon-
deau "to this Commonwealth, for the coyning of the monie, by a new
Invention, not yet practised in any State of the world ; the which will
prevent counterfeiting, casting, washing, and clipping of the same ; which
Coyn shall bee marked on both the flat sides, and about the tbickness or
the edge ; of a like bigness and largness, as the ordinarie coyn is, and will
cost no more then the ordinarie unequal Coyn, which is used now."
Blondeau commences by explaining :" First, the reason why the Coyn
of this Common-wealth is clipped and light, so that few pieces are to bee
found weighing their true weight ; As also the reason why so much fals
Coyn is now dispersed. And secondly, the onely way to remedie the said
inconveniences, and to settle a good and constant order in the Mint." The
reasons of the first-mentioned abuses are, the facility and cheapness with
which hammered coins can be counterfeited, and because such coins cannot
be made exactly round, nor equal in weight and size. Much coin is also
made too light even at the Mint, as Blondeau has found by weighing coins
received from the Mint. This encourages persons to cull the heaviest
pieces, and to melt or export them. He asserts that the workmen of the
Mint do not deliver the coin by tale, but by the pound weight, so that they
often make a larger number of pieces to the pound than there should be,
and also themselves cull or pick out the heaviest pieces to melt downagain. There is no remedy for these evils but by making the money in
Blondeau's way, with devices not only on both sides, but also on the edges.
Pieces made by his method cannot be clipped, because of the marks on the
edges ; and, having perfectly equal weights and sizes, with a fine polish,
prevent culling and washing. Ordinary hammered money may be moulded
and cast, but Blondeau' s, because of the inscribed edges, cannot be success-
fully cast. He suggests that a certain officer should be appointed in the
Mint, whose business should be to weigh the coins piece by piece when
they are finished, rejecting the light ones for re-coinage. He also suggests
that, in order to maintain the standard, any goldsmith should be allowed
to assay the current coin, and complain to the Commissioners of the Mint
if he finds it faulty. Blondeau then describes the circumstances of his
coming to London, as quoted above (page 62). He also details his proceed-
ings with the Committee of Council for the Mint, the opposition of the
officers of the Mint, and the circumstances of the trial of skill, with par-
ticulars concerning the pattern pieces, already noticed. He sets forth
several objections to Eamage's patterns, and their great expense; and
asserts further that the moneyers could never find out how to make the
money by his way, although they had spent much time in unsuccessful
endeavours. The workmen of the Mint having given to understand that
they are two hundred poor families, maintained by the work of the Mint,
and would become destitute if Blondeau was employed for the coinage ; he
totally denies this, and says they are hardly thirty masters, who are all
rich. If employed, Blondeau will engage only such workmen a's are
approved by the State, and will not desire to have the custody of the
bullion or of the dies. In conclusion, he draws attention to the exact
equality of his coins, their being very difficult to counterfeit, and much
cheaper than the hammered money ; and states that he has no other em-
ployment in England but " to attend the pleasure of the State."
Immediately after the publication of the Most Humble Memorandum,
a pamphlet was issued by Thomas Violet on behalf of the Moneyers, en-
titled :
" The Answer of the Corporation of Mo'niers in the Mint, at the Tower
of London, to two false and scandalous Libells printed at London, and lately
come forth without date. The First intituled, The humble Representation of
Peter Blondeau, as a warning touching severall disorders hapning by Money ill-
favouredly coyned, and the only means to prevent them. The Second intituled,
A most humble Memorandum from Peter Blondeau- Which not only intends
78 jP j ni is in Eta Crura tin Hi no.
maliciously to sandall* Us, the Corporation of Moniers, of the Common-
Wealth of England: But also most falsly to imprint in the hearts and
mindes of all People in Christendoms, and more especially the good People
under the obedience of the Parliament of England ; That (by Us the Cor-
poration of Moniers) the Moneys of this Common-Wealth, both for Gold
and Silver, are not justly made, according to Our Indenture. Set forth to
undeceive all the good People that have seen or read the said Peter Blon-
deau's false and scandalous Libells.—Printed for the Corporation of Moniers.
1653." London. Folio, forty-one pages.
On pages 1 and 2 is printed a letter from Violet to the Clerk of the
Corporation of Moneyers, mentioning that Blondeau's Humble Memorandum
had come into his hands "this day," 25th January, 1652-3, and advising
the Corporation to prosecute him for libel. On page 3 is the answer of the
Moneyers, dated the 27th January, desiring Violet to reply on their behalf
to the accusations of Blondeau. Violet then prints at full length Blondeau's
Humble Representation and Humble Memorandum, which we have already
described. The remaining pages of the pamphlet are chiefly occupied with
Violet's replies to the assertions in these two documents. He maintains
that Eamage's patterns are superior to Blondeau's, and accuses the latter
of treason, for making his pattern pieces in a private house. He says that
the Committee of the Mint sent and seized the instruments and tools in
Blondeau's house, and deposited them in the Tower Mint. Violet then
denies the great expense of Eamage's pattern pieces, and prints the
account. He says that many of the Corporation of Moneyers are poor,
aud not rich, as asserted by Blondeau, and on the last two pages gives a
list of the Fellow-moneyers and Labourers employed in the Mint on the
27th January, 1652-3, amounting to fifty-nine moneyers and fifty-one
labourers.
Until the month of April, 1653, the matter remained in the samestate, viz
:the Committee of the Mint retaining in their hands Parnate's
and Blondeau's patterns, and the proposals and representations of bothsides. The Chairman pf this Committee, Sir James Harrington, was thenrequested to present to the Parliament these propositions, by an order of
the Council of State of—
* Scandal!
fittn 38Uttilnnr. 79
Friday, 15th April, 1653.—Ordered "That Sr James Harington bee
desired humbly to present to ye Pari'* ye Propositions made by Peter
Blondeau on ye one part, and ye Moneyers of ye Mint on ye other part,
Concerning ye Coyning of money in a way differing from w*f hath beene
hitherto practised and used in this Cofhonwealth and wch is propounded to
bee for ye securing of Coyne from being Counterfeited or Clipped."
—
Interregnum State Papers, Council Draft Order Book, No. 69.
And on the same day the Parliament ordered
—
" That the Council of State do make the Eeport, touching preventing
Clipping of Money, on Thursday Morning next."
—
Journals of the House of
Commons, vol. vii., p. 278.
As the Thursday mentioned was the 21st April, 1653, and the Par-
liament was dissolved by Cromwell on the preceding day, Wednesday the
20th, it is obvious that the report in question was never made.
The books of the Council of State do not contain any further notices
of Blondeau until the 7th May, when the Council ordered that Sir J. Har-
rington's report should be made to them, instead of to the Parliament,
since no Parliament was then sitting.
Saturday, 7th May, 1653.—Ordered " That the report concerning the
Mint and Mr Blondeau be brought in upon Wednesday next, and that S r
James Harrington be sent unto for the papers relating to that businesse."
—
Page 31, Entry Book, No. 97.
Probably from pressure of more important business, the report was not
read on the Wednesday, viz : the 11th May ; but on Tuesday the 24th, the
Propositions of Peter Blondeau were referred to a Committee appointed
on the same day for the business of the Mint (page 142, Entry Book, No. 97).
This Committee was composed of Colonel Jones, Colonel Bennett, and
Major-General Lambert. In their hands the matter remained, and we
cannot find any further orders concerning Blondeau during the remainder
of the year 1653. It is therefore very probable that nothing was done by
the authorities, especially as Blondeau, in September of this year, published
another printed petition. We are indebted to Mr. K. W. Cochran Patrick,
F.S.A.Sc, for bringing to our notice the only copy known, which is
preserved among the family papers of Lord Hopetoun. Through the
* Parliament. f what.
80 Stnmnm&ia tfrnramilliiMii.
courtesy of Mr. James Hope and Mr. Thomas Dickson, of Edinburgh, we
are enabled to give the following particulars of this little tract.
The first page commences thus :" A most humble Remonstrance of
Peter Blondeau, concerning the offers by him made to this Commonwealth," etc.
It then continues in almost the same words as the Most Humble Memoran-
dum from Peter Blondeau, described above. Blondeau says, on page 1, that
his milled money " will cost no more to those that bring their Bullion to
bee coyned, than the ordinarie Coyn, viz., 15 shillings for the pound weight
of Gold, and 2 shillings for the pound weight of silver."
This tract, called the Most Humble Remonstrance, is, in fact, an enlarged
reprint of Blondeau's previously issued Most Humble Memorandum. It is
printed with type of the same size, on paper of a similar size, and comprises
twenty-three printed pages on twelve leaves, small octavo. The text is the
same as the Memorandum, with additions on pages 4, 7, 8, 11, 13, 14, 15, 17,
19, 20, and on page 23, which is not numbered. The date, " September 4,
1653," is given at the end of page 22.
We have now completed the history of Blondeau and his inventions
down to the period of the Protectorate.
At the commencement of Oliver's government as Protector, Peter
Blondeau had been more than four years in England, without having
received any reward or pecuniary encouragement for his useful inventions.
He had made voluminous petitions and proposals, and sent in the best
executed pattern-pieces ever seen in this country up to that time; but
nothing had been done, and the Mint continued to strike the very inferior
hammered coinage commenced in 1649. It was Oliver Cromwell who first
made use of Blondeau's valuable inventions, in having a complete series of
coins struck by his process. The Protector also rewarded him with a
pension of £100 a year, and granted him other sums of money for various
purposes on several occasions; as we shall now proceed to set forth from
the original documents, hitherto unpublished.
It appears that Blondeau sent in a petition (which is not now extant)
to the Protector soon after his accession to power ; for we find the following
entry in the books of the Council of State
—
Thursday, 16th February, 1653-4 {post meridiem).—" The humblepeticon of Peter Blondeau being referred to ye Councell by his Highnes
$itn 98Imtfoo. 81
was now read. Ordered That these be a Comittee for considering of the
Eegulacon of ye Mint, Ma. G. Lambt, Col. Jones, Sr Charles Wolsley,
Mr Strickland, Col. Mackworth, or any three of them, & that ye peticon of
Peter Blondeau and Mr Squibbs p'posall and other peticons concerning ye
Mint be referred to that Comittee, & Col. Jones to take care thereof."
—
Pages 4, 5, Draft Order Boole, No. '77.
It will be observed from this order that several other petitions, some
perhaps concerning the making of farthings, were made on the subject of
the coinage. "We have not been able to find any of them, nor do we know
who " Mr. Squibbs " was.
Among the Interregnum Letters and Papers in the Eecord Office, bundle
No. 820, is the subjoined report, written in a clerk's hand, and signed by
Major-G-eneral Lambert and Sir Charles Wolseley, two of the Committee
for the Mint mentioned in the order last quoted. There is no date on this
manuscript, but, from a careful consideration of several circumstances, we
consider it to be the report made to the Council in pursuance of their order
of the 16th February, 1653-4, and most probably read at the meeting on
the 7th March.
Eepoet.—" According to yor Lordships Order of reference, We have
considered of the petition and proposealls tendred by Mr Blondeau con-
cerning the Mint, wherein he proposeth severall wayes of advantage to the
State in reference to Coyning, viz', That the money coyned in his way
shall not be subject to Clippinge, That all peices of the same Species shall
be of the same weight, The varying in which hath beene heretofore looked
upon as a great Inconveniency in the ordinarie way of Coyninge, and will
for ye further Satisfaction herein be obliged to receive in the Bullion by
weight, and pay it out by tayle full weight according to the Standard.
That it shall be very Chargeable and difficult to be counterfett, and not at
all to be done by ordinarie privat persons as now, nor by any but good
Artists, and at a great Charge, and by such Engines as are hard to b kept
private, And Lastly, That this Coyne shall be very handsome to ye eye.
To make good which, he hath shewed to this Comee severall peices of his
Coyning, which upon due Consideration had, We conceive will in great
measure answer what is before mentioned, We have also received his de-
mand concerning the rate for coyning wch is as followeth viz*
:
82 Unraisradfl €nmmi[\nna.
30lb weight Troy will make 372 Crownes
30 ... . 744 halfe Crownes .
>At lsh : 6d.
34 ... . 2108 Shillings
6 744 Sixpences
100 3968 peices.
5Hb weight Troy will make 1265 halfe Crownes
42 ... 2604 Shillings :
;
7 . . . . 868 Sixpences !
100 4737 peices.
56lb: 3 ounces will make 2325 : 18d peices
37 . 6 ounces . . . 2325 shillings J- At 1*. 7<i.
6 . 3 ounces . . . 775 six pences}
100 5425 peices.
The Golde to be coyned at 7sh : the pound Troy observing the Auntient
proportions, in twenty Shilling peices, Angells, and Crownes, he takeing
upon himselfe all loss wch shall happen by Sisill.
" We have for our better satisfaction heard the Officers of his Highnes
Mint, who have offered severall exceptions to Mr Blondeaus way, but we
find none considerable, save only, That ye said Mr Blondeau will not be
able to performe this worke at the rate proposed, And upon Consideration
of the whole matter We doe humbly offer That tryall may be made of his
abilitie to performe this Undertaking upon good security given by the said
Mr Blondeau, And that in Order thereunto * Bullion may be put
into his hand to be coyned, And in Case satisfaction shall be therein given,
Forasmuch as it is resolved, That a Mint shall be erected in Irel'd (Mony
being there soe Generally corrupted to ye great prejudice of the Inhabi-
tants), That he may be entrusted in that worke. And if he shall punctually
performe according to such Agreement as shall be made in that Under-
taking, That then he be admitted to ye Charge of the Mint in England,
* Blank in original.
}hbr SSlimltm. 83
upon ye Tearmes proposed, and according to such rules as are, or hereafter
shall be agreed upon, And We doe further offer That a House may be pro-
vided for him in London for the tryall aforesaid, And also an order Given
to his Highnes graver of the Mint to prepare Dices [Dies] with such Devises
and Inscriptions as shall be thought fitt, Viz* : in Silver, for Crownes peices,
halfe Crownes, Shillings, and sixpences peices, And of Gold for Twenty
shillings, Tenn shillings, and Five shillings peices, And for the devise and
superscription thereof, It is humbly offered, That on one side may be his
Highnes Effigies, and on ye other his High/ es Armes, with such differences
betwixt the Gould and Silver, as shall be Judged convenient for avoyding*
the fraud in gilding and putting of silver peices soe gilded for Gould, Andthat .... [£350 in margin] may be allowed him for preparing of his
Engines.
" J. Lambert.
" Ch: Wokeley."
In this report it is recommended that Blondeau be entrusted with the
work of setting up a Mint in Ireland, since the erection of a Mint in that
country had been already resolved upon, " money being there so generally
corrupted, to the great prejudice of the inhabitants." The reader will also
observe, on reference to page 22 of this work, that a petition from the Irish
Council for a mint had been received by the Protector in the latter part of
February, 1653-4. Accordingly, on the 7th March, the English Council of
State, having before them the report of Lambert and Wolseley (just quoted),
made the following reference regarding the proposed Irish mint
—
Thursday, 7th March, 1653-4.—Ordered " That the business now offered
to ye Counsell touching the erecting of a Mint in Ireland be cofnitted to ye
Comittee touching the Mint, and that they take up the Consideracou
thereof this afternoone, And that Col. Sydenham be added to that Comee."
—Page 85, Draft Order Book, No. 77.
Another order concerning the same matter may be given in this
place
—
Thursday, 27th April, 1654.—Ordered " That a papr signed by Mr.
James Standish concerning a Mint in Ireland, being this day p'sented, be
referred to ye Comee of ye Counsell for ye Mint, and Col. ffiennes is added
to ye said Com™."—Page 66, Draft Order Booh, No. 79.
84 Ittmismafn Cxjimmtiiiaus,
The paper " signed by Mr. James Standish " does not now appear to
be in existence.
The next step taken by the Council in the matter of the Irish Mint
was to order the payment of £50 to Blondeau, towards the expenses of his
journey to Ireland, and for the cost of materials for the Mint there, in
these terms
—
Tuesday, 25th July, 1654.—His Highness present.-1—" Ordered by his
Highness the Lord Protector and ye Counsell, That 501 be paid out of ye
Counsells Contingencyes to Mr Blondeau towards the Charge of his
journey into Ireld and provideing materialls for a Mint there, and that a
Warrant to Mr Frost be in that behalfe issued."
—
Page 443, Entry Book,
No. 103.
The following is a copy of the "Warrant referred to, taken from the
Money Warrant Book, No. 126, page 80—" In pursuiance of an ordr of his Highness the Lord Protector and ye
Counsel, bearing date the 25* of this instant July, These are to will and
require you, out of such moneys as are or shall come to yor hands for ye
use of ye Counsell, to pay unto Monger peter Blondeau the sum of Fiftie
pounds towards the Charge of his journey into Ireland and ye Providing
materialls for a mint there. Of wch you are not to faile, and for wch this
shalbe yor Warrant. Given at Whitehall this 31 th of July, 1654.
" Hen. Lawrence P cA.
C. Mountague.
P. Jones.
Anth: Ashley Cooper.
H. Mackworth.
Rich. Maijor.
Gilbt. Pickering.
« To Mr Gualter Frost."
Leaving the subject of the Irish Mint for a moment, we must nowreturn to Blondeau's old requests either to be employed in the English
Mint, or to be indemnified for his expenses in coming to England andmaking his pattern pieces. The following is another petition, contain-
ing similar entreaties^ but addressed to the Protector's Council of State,
viz:
—
ftlu aJloifntt. 85
" To the right honorable the Councill of his Highnesse.
" The humble Petition of Peter Blondeau,
" Sheweth,
" That his Highnesse having been pleased to referre to yor honrs con-
sideration the Petition lately presented to him by yor Petr,
" Yor sd Petr doth most humbly beseech yor hon« to be pleased to take
the sd Petition into yor speedy consideration, as also the Orders here
annexed, and according unto the tenor of the sd Petition either to order that
yor Petr shall be imployed in the Mint according to his Proposition, or dis-
missed and indemnified of his charges and losses and for the expenses he
hath been at in making of his Paterns.
" And yor Petr shall ever pray &c.
" Aprill 21. 1654."
It mil be noticed that Blondeau here refers to a petition lately pre-
sented by him to the Protector. It is the one mentioned in the Council's
order of the 16th February, 1653-4 (see page 80 above).
Annexed to this petition of April, 1654, are copies of several orders of
the Council of State and of the Committee for the Mint, dating from the
11th September, 1649, to the 15th April, 1653. They have all been quoted
above, in their proper chronological order. The petition is indorsed:
" Eead and referred, 28th April, 1654." It is now preserved in the Public
Eecord Office among the Interregnum State Papers, Petitions, References,
etc., vol. ii. B.
The following is the order made by the Council upon the reading of
this petition
—
Friday, 28th April, 1654.—" The humble peticon of Peter Blondeau
was this day read. Ordered that the same be referred to the Comttee of
the Mint, who, or any three of them, are desired to meet speedily, and to
take the same into consideracon, and report their opinion to the Councell,
and Col. ffiennes, Mr Strickland, and Sr Anth. Ash. Cooper are added to
the said Cofhittee."
—
Page 76, Draft Order Book, No. 79.
8,6 Sitmismflia Gummllhwi.
No further notice of Blondeau can be found among the Council Books
until—
Friday, 2nd March, 1654-5.—Ordered "That ye humble peticon of
Peter Blondeau be referred to Gen^ Desbrowe, Sr Gilbt Pickering, Lo.
Lambert, Col. Jones, or any 2 of them, who are desired to consider the
severall pts [parts] thereof, and to report their opinion therein to ye Coun-
sell."—Pages 64, 65, Draft Order Book, No. 82.
The petition here mentioned is the same one as that of the 21st April,
1654, printed above, and accordingly we find that the report in pursuance
of the order of the 2nd March, 1654-5 is written on the back of that
petition, viz :
—
" It is the humble opinion of the Comtee to whom the Petition of Mr
Blondeau was referr'd that the sayd Blondeau have advanced to him the
sum of 100 1 towards the expence hee hath been at in preparing of engins
for the mint." Gil. Pickering.
" Phi. Jones."
This report having been laid before the Council, they made the follow-
ing order, which was approved by the Protector in person
—
Tuesday, 26th June, 1655.—His Highness present.—
" S r Gilbert
Pickering makes report from ye Comittee to whom the peticon of Msieur
Blondeau was referred. Ord. That it be offered to his Highness as the
advise of ye Counsell That his Highness will please to issue his wan* to
.the Comrs of his Highness Treasury for empowering and requireing them,
out of such monyes as shall come into the Beceipt of his Highness Exche-
quor to satisfie and pay to Mr Peter Blondeau the ,surh of one hundred
tpounds towards the expences he hath beene at in p pareing of Engins for
the Mint in Irel'd."—Page 17, Draft Order Book, No. 84.
The subjoined is a copy of the Warrant of Privy Seal, taken from
Oliver's Privy Seal Book, No. 13, page 1. Date of document, 11th July,
1655 ; date of inrolment, 18th July, 1655.
" OLIVEB Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England Scot-
land and Ireland and the Dominions thereto belonging, To the Comrs 1 of
and for Oure Treasury Greeting, Our will and pleasure is, And wee doe
1 Commissioners.
$ihr 36lnnhan. 87
hereby require and corhaund you that you, or any two or more of you, out
of such our Treasures as is or shall bee remayning in the Eeeeipt of Our
Excheqr, forthwith paie or cause to bee paid unto Peter Elondeau the
Some of One hundred pounds, for and towards the expences hee hath bene
att in p'paring2 Engines for Our Mint in Ireland, And for soe doeing theis
Our L'res3 shall bee yor sufficient Warrant and Discharge in tins behalfe.
Given under Our Privie Seale att Whitehall the eleaventh day of July in
the yeare of our Lord One Thousand six hundred ffiftie ffrve.
" R: Whithed."*
The money was paid to Elondeau on the 18th July, as appears from
an entry in the Pells Issue Book No. 90, page 149
—
" July xviij tn 1665.
" To Peter Blondeau C1 toward his expenc's in preparing Engines for
his Highnes Mint in Ireland. By privie seale dat. the xjtn of July 1655
CI
" Horseman."
This is the last notice of the Irish Mint project that is to be found
among the State Papers, but, in accordance with the promise given on
page 24 of. this work, we reprint the following address to the Protector
from the Irish Council of State, dated from Dublin Castle, 16th April,
1656 :—
" To the Lord Protector.
" May it please your highness,
" By many former addresses unto your highness and councell we have
made known the miserable condition this nation is in, through that vast
quantity of Peru and other base and counterfeit coyne, this poor nation
hath of late bene burthened with. Indeed we are not able (soe fully as we
would) to expresse our resentments of this growing evill, the generall dis-
content it beares upon most men's hearts, nor the prejudice that is likely
to arise, unless some speedy remedy bee applied, for like a gangren this
adulterate coyne spreads farr and near. It banishes hence the currant
coyne of Spaine, and eats up the good English money, which the merchants
2 preparing. 8 Letters.
* Bichard Whitehead was one of the Clerks of Hia Highness's Privy Seal.
88 JlnnriBinatu durnintndltanii.
(for want of exchange or other commodities to return) make it a secret
trade to export into England, or (notwithstanding our utmost care for
prevention) into some forreigne partes, to any place where it yields most
advantage, hereby the stock of this nation is detrimented much above two
thirds as is conceived ; little other money is visible, saye this counterfeit
American, which ordinarily goes for four shillings and sixpence, and upon
the essay is found not to value two shillings and four pence, and most of
that which runs currant is very little better than brasse or alchamy. Trade
hereby is exceedingly obstructed, plantation much discouraged, necessary
provisions witheld, and monthly contributions (for supply of your highness's
forces here) payd in such base coyne, as become great loss to the receivers,
and being refused in divers places (the temper of the people generally
abhorring it) the publique affairs without speedy care ('tis feared) will un-
avoidably fall into disorder ; nor can we apprehend other then that this
manifest inconvenience may in the end begett disturbance in the people,
unless your highness (out of your pious and fatherly care of the welfare of
this country) tenderly consider of what we have faithfully represented.
Nor know wee any other or better expedient for the cure hereof, or how to
apply a suitable remedy, save by a mint, which now, as formerly, we most
humbly and earnestly desire (if the same may be held adviseable) may (at
least for some time) be erected here. This (as we conceive) will allay the
importation of more such trash, it will encourage us to decry what through
necessity is made currant here, will enable us to call in the Peru and
Mexico (which are little better then brasse, and at present the farr greater
proportion of coyne here) and being melted, the produce may be reduced
to the standard. And for that the souldier, and poorer sort especially,
want the lesser and smaller sorts of money for change and to buy pro-
visions with ; this may accommodate them with small and necessary pro-
portions, fyc"
" H. C.1 E. P.'2 M. C.s M. T.*"
See James Simon's Essay on Irish Coins, quarto, Dublin, 1749 (re-
printed 1810), Appendix No. L, page 120, transcribed from the Council
office book, A. 30, p. 148. About a year afterwards the Irish Council
1 Henry Cromwell. 2 Richard Pepys. 3 Miles Corbett. 4 Matthew Tomlinaon.
All members of the Irish Council of State.—H. W. H.
fEtn aSUahaa. 89
addressed another petition on the same subject to the Lord Deputy of
Ireland. It is dated the 4th March, 1656-7, and is printed on pages 121,
122, of Simon's Essay.
Nothing, however, seems to have been really done beyond the pre-
parations made by Blondeau, for which he was paid, by means of the
warrants we have quoted, the sum of £150 in all. There is no doubt that
the project of a mint at Dublin was soon abandoned, for some unknown
cause, and no money is known to have been coined in or for the use of
Ireland during the whole of the Protectorate, nor indeed until the latter
part of Charles II. 's reign.
Before leaving the subject of Blondeau and his inventions, it appears
proper to mention the tardy reward which he received for all his trouble
and expenditure of time and money. On the 19th August, 1656, at the
same time that they made their first order for the coinage of Oliver's money
of 1656, the Council recommended that a pension should be granted to
Blondeau, in these terms :
—
Tuesday, 19th August, 1656.—Ordered, "That it be offered to his
Highness as the advise of the Counsell, That his Highness wilbe pleased to
issue his Warr' authorizeing and requireing the Comrs of his Highness
Thr'ey [Treasury], out of such moneys as now are or shall come into the
Receipt of his Highness Excheqr to satisfy and pay unto Peter Blondeau
the yearely pencon of One hundred pounds by halfe yearely paying untill
further Order."—Page 339, Entry Booh, No. 105.
Hereupon the Protector, by letters of Privy Seal dated the 18th Sep-
tember, 1656, conferred on Peter Blondeau a pension of £100 per annum, to
continue until further order, "in consideration of the good and faithful
service to us done and performed, and to be done and performed," by him.
The work " to be done " was the coinage of £2,000 in the Tower of London,
ordered by the Protector and his Council on the 19th August, 1656. This
subject will be more fully noticed in our article upon Oliver's coinage
of 1656.
On the 19th September it was ordered that £50, for the first half year
of Blondeau's pension, should be paid at Michaelmas, 1656, and also that
the Privy Seal should be issued gratis, without fees. In the Pells' Issue
90 $ii mi stunt a Crnmmilliaiin.
Book, No. 92, we find entries of a half-year's pension paid to him on the
3rd December, 1656, and 22nd April, 1657, embracing the period of one
year ending at Easter, 1657.
We here subjoin an exact copy of the letters of Privy Seal, from
Oliver's Privy Seal Boole, No. 13, page 66. Date of document, 18th Sep-
tember, 1656 ; date of inrolment, 23rd October, 1656.
" OLIVER Loed Peotectoe of the Comon-wealth of England Scotland
and Ireland, and the dominions thereto belonging, To the Com131 of and
for Our Treasury that now are, And to the Comrs of Our Trea'ry,2 Tre'ar,3
Chauncellor, undr-tre'ar4 and Barons of the Excheqr att Westmr5 of us &
Our Successor, and to all others the Officers and Ministers of Our said
Excheqr, now and for the tyme being, and to every of them and all others
to whom theis p sents6 shall or may appertaine Greeting, Know yee that
wee of Our especiall Grace, certaine knowledge and meere mocon, in eon-
sideracon of the good and faithfull service to us done and performed and
to bee done and performed by Our welbeloved Peter Blondeau, gentl',*
Have given and graunted, and by theis p'sents doe give and graunt unto
him the said Peter Blondeau the yearely sunie or Pencon of one hundred
pounds of lawfull money of England, to bee yearely paid unto him att the
Eeceipt of Our said Excheqr, on the five and twentieth day of March, and
the nine and twentieth day of Septembr, by equal porcons, And therefore
Our will and pleasure is, that out of such Our Treasure as is, or shalbee
remayning in the Eeceipt of Our Excheqr, you pay or cause to bee paid
unto the said Peter Blondeau, or his assignes, the said yearely suffte or
pencon of one hundred pounds on the dayes before menconed, To comence
from & after the five and twentieth day of March in this p'sent yeare, one
thousand six hundred nifty six, and soe from thenceforth to continue untill
wee shall thinke fitt to ordr8 otherwise ; ffor soe doeing theis Our L'res9 or
the InroUm4 thereof shalbee aswell to you the said Comrs of Our Trea'ry,
as to all others the Officrs and ministers of Our said Excheqr a sufficient
wan*10 and discharge in this behalfe. Given undr Our Privy Seale att Our
Palace of Westmr the eighteenth day of Septembr in the yeare of Our Lord
One thousand six hundred ffifty six.
"Daniel Grome Deptie of Ei: Whittled."
1 Commissioners. 2 Treasury. 3 Treasurer. * Under-treasurer. 5 Westminster.6 presents. 7 gentleman. 8 order. s Letters. 10 warrant.
€\i (IDninagB nf 1656. 91
In conclusion, it may be remarked that most of the documents quoted
in this article were unknown to previous numismatic writers, so much so
that the Eev. Eogers Euding inaccurately stated that the continued oppo-
sition of the Moneyers " at length succeeded in driving him (Blondeau) out
of the kingdom." (Footnote to p. 414, vol. i. of the Annals of the Coinage,
London, 1840.) Peter Blondeau's Proposals to the Parliament, June, 1650,
and his Most Humble Memorandum, January, 1652-3, were transcribed and
reprinted by Mr. W. E. Hamilton in vol. i., old series, of the Numismatic
Chronicle, 8vo, London, 1839.
I'HE COINAGE QF 1656.
In describing the Protector Oliver's coinage dated 1656, it will be most
convenient to divide our account into five sections, containing : (1) the
Historical Eecords relating to the Coinage, (2) History of the Bullion used,
(3) Description of the Coins, (4) Description of the Coining process,
(5) Description of the Place where the coins were made.
I.
—
Historical Eecords.
About the middle of the year 1656, the Protector resolved to issue a
series of coins for general circulation, bearing his own portrait and titles,
and executed in the best possible manner. That they were intended for
general currency, will not admit of doubt, after a perusal of the orders of
the Council of State in 1656, 1657, and 1658, which show that very con-
siderable preparations for coinage were made. Whether the money with
Oliver's head became actually current or not, is another question, which
cannot be properly discussed until we have considered the coinage of 1658.
In order to have his new coinage executed in the most perfect style,
Oliver employed the unrivalled Thomas Simon to engrave the dies, and
the " ingenious engineer " Peter Blondeau to strike the coins from those
dies. An account of Blondeau's new and successful inventions is given in
the preceding pages, 61 et seg.
It will also add to the interest with which an English collector regards
these beautiful pieces of money, to learn that they were made out of bullion
92 Unraisrantn (Crnmmilliciia.
captured by Captain Stayner from the Spaniards on the 9th September,
1656 ; as we shall set forth more fully in the next section. This fact has
been hitherto unknown to numismatists, but was discovered from one of
the unpublished records of the period. These records we must now proceed
to notice.
On Tuesday, the 19th August, 1656, it was " Ordered by his Highness
the Lord Protector and the Counsel! That a quantity of the Portugal!
money to the value of two thousand pounds Sterling, and all the Gold
brought on w111 that money, be Coyned in his Highness Mynt in y* Tower
of London, by Peter Blondeau."—Pages 339, 340, Entry Book, No. 105, of
the Council of State. (Public Eecord Office.)
The Council's intentions of using bullion from Portugal, and of coining
it m the Tower, were altered by subsequent orders. It was next purposed
to make use of bullion supplied by Edward Backwell, a goldsmith and
banker of London, as we learn from another order of the Council
—
Thursday, 11th September, 1656, a.m>.—" Whereas it was ordered on
the 19111 day of Aug1 last, yl 1 a quantity of Portugal! money to the value
of Two thousand pounds Sterls should be Coyned in his Highness Mint, at
ye Tower, by Peter Blondeau ; Ordered, That, instead thereof, two thousand
pounds of y* bullion that is to [be] brought in by Mr Backwell be Coyned
by the sayd Mr Blondeau"—Page 384, Entry Book, No. 105.
A little farther on is an order of the same date, directing the needful
preparations for the projected coinage, in these terms :
—
" Ordered, That for accommodateing Mr Peter Blondeau in Coyning
two thousand pounds, p't2 of the Bullion that shalbe brought into the Myntby Mr Edward Backwell, the Wardens of the Mynt, at the Tower, doe putt
the sayd Peter Blondeau in poss'ion3 of that house in the Tower, wherein
M>ieur Briott* did form'ly* worke ; And that the sayd Msieur Blondeau be
authorized to make use of such Forges, Tooles, and Utensills, as are already
in the s'd5 House, and of such other Tooles, and lustrum's 6 in the Tower
as are necessary or useful! for his Coyning of ye sayd money ; and Mr
Symon ye Graver of his Highness Mynt and Seales, is authorized and re-
quired to prepare the Dice,7 w* such Stamps and Inscripcons, as shalbe
thought fitting."—Page 385, Entry Book, No. 105.
1 that. 2 part. 3 possession. l formerly. * said. 6 Instruments. 7 dies.
* Engraver to the Mint in the reign of Charles I., see p. 4 above.
<B|!i tfnimigi nf 1656. 93
The preceding order clearly shows that Peter Blondeau was to strike
a new issue of money, to the value of £2000, from dies engraved by Thomas
Simon ; and a further order, to a nearly similar effect, especially states that
the coining process was to be according to Blondeau's " new invention."
It also appears that he, like many other inventors of new and valuable
machinery, needed protection against " molestations."
Thursday, 16th October, 1656.—His Highness present.—"Ordered,
That for enabling Mr Peter Blondeau to Coyne the money ordered by his
Highness and the Counsell to be by him Coyned, after his new Invencon,
the Leiv'1 of the Tower, or Major Miller his Depty,2 doe wthin a weekes
tyme after request in that behalfe made, put the sayd Peter Blondeau in
poss'ion3 of the house wherein form'ly* Mr Bryot did worke in the Tower,
And yt5 they doe protect him and those he shall imploy therein agt6 any
molestacons."—Page 4A3, Entry Book, No. 105.
Whether Blondeau was ever actually put in possession of Briot's house,
does not appear from the Council books, but the next order probably means
that he was to have rooms in Worcester House instead.
Tuesday, 11th November, 1656.—" Ordered That for inabling Mr Peter
Blondeau to Coyne the money ordered by his Highness and the Counsell
to be by him Coyned after his new Invencon, the Keep7 of Worcester
House doe w&in a weekes tyme after the date hereof put the sayd Peter
Blondeau in poss'ion8 of the Kitchin and Larder, and such other places in
the s'd9 House, not imploy'd already for the necessary Service of ye State
as shalbe convenient and usefull for his Coyneing of ye said money."
—
(Approved in person, His Highness being present.)
—
Page 490, Entry Book,
No. 105.
On the 27th of the same month the Council examined and approved
Simon's drawings of the devices and inscriptions proposed for the new
coinage
:
Thursday, 27th November, 1656.—His Highness present.—Ordered
" That the Stamp10 and Inscriptions prep'ed11 by Mr Tho : Simon for the
Coyne of Gold and Silver peices according to his new Invencon, as also the
Motto of Oliva : D. G. R. Pub. Ang. Sco. et Hib. Protec. on one side, and
1 Lieutenant. 2 Deputy. 3 possession. 4 formerly. 5 that. 6 against.
7 Keeper. 8 possession. * said.
*' "Stamp " here means the design or device to be stamped on the coins. u prepared.
94 JUmismatfl (TtninniBUii-nn.
Pfl# quceritur hello on ye other side, and the 2 inscripcons for ye edge
thereof, viz', Has nisi periturus mihi adimat nemo, and Protector Uteris, litera
nummis Corona et Salics, being now presented, and considered of, be ap-
proved."
—
Page 533, Entry Book, No. 105.
The clerk has made a memorandum on the margin of the book, stating
that he delivered to Mr. Simon, on the 6th December, this order -written
out on the piece of parchment on which the designs were drawn. In the
same book, the name "Tho: Simon" is written over "Blondeau" erased.
A little farther on is the expression " his new Invencon," which really
refers to Blondeau, whose name was erroneously written at first. It should
have been altered to " Blondeau's new invention " when the name of Simon
was inserted above.
This order of the Council was printed in the Appendix to Vertue's
Works of Thomas Simon, 1780 edition, pages 70* 71*, from a contemporary
manuscript copy (perhaps the original parchment delivered to Simon), in
the margin of which was a drawing of the crown piece, with obverse,
Oliver's bust in the band and robe of his day ; reverse, the arms as on the
coins. On the same document was also a drawing of the twenty-shilling
piece, obverse, bust with bare neck ; reverse, the shield of arms.
On the 3rd December, the Council again changed the place where
Blondeau was to conduct his coining operations, probably because sufficient
accommodation could not be found in the houses previously agreed upon.
The last place appointed, and the one at which Blondeau actually coined
the money, was Drury House. By the following orders Blondeau and
Simon were enjoined to proceed at once with the new coinage :
—
Wednesday, 3rd December, 1656.—"Ordered, That for inabling Mr
Peter Blondeau to coyne ye money ordered by his Highness and ye Counsel 1
to be by him Coyned, after his new Invention, the Trustees sitting at
Drury House doe, w&in a weekes tyme after the date hereof put the said
Peter Blondeau in possession of the Kitchin, Larder, Cellars, Coachhouses,
and such Chambers, and other Boomes in the said house, not employedalready for the necessary service of the State, as shall be convenient &usefull for his coyning of the said money.
" That Mr Thomas Simon, Cheife Graver of his Highness Mint andSeales, doe forthwith make and prepare such stamps & dyes, as may beusefull to Peter Blondeau, in his new way of Coyning, with the Effigies
€\t CniogE nf 1656. 95
of his Highness according to the Draughts lately prepared by him, and
approved by the CounselL
" That Mr Peter Blondeau be, and hereby is, authorised to put in
execution his new way of Coyning forthwith, according to ye former Orders
of his Highness and the CounselL, and that noe person or persons doe
molest him therein, by search or otherwise."
—
Page 553, Entry Book, No. 105.
It was further ordered, on Thursday, 11th December, 1656, His
Highness present, " That the Stamp and Supscripcon1 on one side of ye
money to be Coyned according to Mr Blondeau's new Invencon be according
to ye Forme now brought in, instead of yt2 form'ly3 agreed on."
—
Page 565,
Entry Book, No. 105.
This order is also printed in the Appendix to Vertue's Works of
Thomas Simon, edit. 1780, p. 71* from a contemporary manuscript copy,
which bore a drawing of the head only, as it is now seen on the coins.
The alteration of the design formerly approved (on the 27th November,
see above) was therefore a change in the style of the bust, the costume of
Oliver's time being altered to the ancient Eoman mantle and laurel wreath.
Blondeau having applied for money to defray the cost of the projected
new coinage, the following order was made :
—
Tuesday, 17th February, 1656 (-7).—Ordered "That ye buisiness of
Mr Peter Blondeau, about his Coyning in his new invented way, be taken
into Consideracon on Thursday next."
—
Page 722, Entry Book, No. 105.
Accordingly, on the following Thursday, the Council voted £200 to
Blondeau for his expenses, and also ordered that £2000 worth of the
Spanish prize bulHon should be delivered to him for coinage by his new
process.
Thursday, 19th February, 1656 (-7).—Ordered "That 2001 be paid
unto Mr Peter Blondeau, for the Carrying dn the Charge of Coyning of
2000 1, according to his New Invencon, that is to say, One hundred pounds
presently, and C14 when he shall enter upon the worke, and it is offered to
his Highness as the advise of ye Counsell, That his Highness will please to
issue his Warrt5 to ye Comrs6 of his Highness Th'rey7 for authorizeing and
requireing them out of such moneys as shall come into ye Receipt of his
Highness Excheqr, to satisfy and pay ye s'd 8 first C 1 accordingly.
1 Superscription. 2 that. 3 formerly.
4 i?100. 5 Warrant. 6 Commissioners. 7 Treasury. 8 said.
96 30 urn ib ran tn Crnmtttjllion.
" That Two thousand pounds value of the Spanish money, wcn lately
came from Portsmouth, and for wcn S r Thomas Vyno r and Mr Backwell
have Contracted w^- the State, be deliv'red to Mr Peter Blondeau, in Order
to the Coyning thereof, according to his new Invencon ; he giveing Suffi-
cient Security before Sr John Barkstead kn1, Leiv* of the Tower,.to redeliv'r
the same, after Coyning, into ye Eeceipt of his Highness Excheqr; or
otherwise to dispose thereof, for the States use, in such Sort as his High-
ness shall direct ; wcn Security the sayd Sr John Barkstead is empow'red
to take accordingly."—Pages 729, 730, Entry Book, No. 105.
The following is the Privy Seal Warrant giving effect to the preceding
order of the Council. It is dated the 20th March, 1656-7, and was inrolled
the 14th May, 1657. From the Privy Seal Book, No. 13, page 128 :—" OLIVEB Lord Protector of the Coihonwealth of England Scotland
and Ireland and the Dominions thereto belonging, To the Comrsl of our
Tre'ary2 Greeting, By the advice of our Councell expressed in their Ordr of
the nineteenth day of ffebruary in this present yeare of our Lord one thou-
sand six hundred ffifty six, our will and pleasure is, and wee doe hereby
require and cofiiaund you, That out of such our Treasure as is, or shalbee
remayning in the Eeceipt of our Excheqr you pay or cause to bee paid
unto Peter Blondeau gent., for carrying on the Charge of Coyning Twothousand pounds according to his new Invencon, the sufne of two hundred
pounds of lawfull money,of England in manner following, that is to say, one
hundred pounds ymediately upon yor Eeceipt hereof, one hundred pounds
more when hee shall enter upon ye said worke, And for soe doeing theis
our L'res3 or the Inrollm.t4 thereof shalbee to you and all others the
Officers and Ministers of our said Excheqr a sufficient warr4 5 and discharge
in this behalfe, Given undr our Privy Seale att our Palace of Westmr6 the
twentieth day of March in the yeare of our Lord one thousand six hundred
ffifty six.
" Daniel Grome, Deptie f Ei: Whithed."
It will be seen from this warrant that £100 was to be paid to Peter
Blondeau immediately, and we learn from the Pells Issue Book that this
sum was accordingly issued to him on the day that the above dooument
was inrolled, viz :
—
' Commissioners. ? Treasury. Letters, 4 Inrollment. s Warrant. 8 Westminster.
€\t i^ninagB nf 1656. 97
" May xiiijth 1657.
" To Peter Blondeau gent, in part of CCU allowed to him for carrying
on the charge of coyning mm12 according to his newe invention by privie
seale dated the xx"1 day of March 1656 C 1
" Downinge."*
The remaining one hundred pounds was to be paid to Blondeau when
he should " enter upon the work " of coining, or commence making the new
money, and we find that this second £100 was given him on the 2nd July,
1657, according to the following entry in the Pells Issue Booh, No. 92,
page 211 :
—
"July the ijd 1657.
" To Peter Blondeau gent, in full of CO1 allowed to him for the coyn-
ing of mm1 according to his newe invention by privy seale dated the xxth-
day of March 1656 C\
" Downinge."
From these documents it is clearly to be inferred that the first pieces
of new milled money with the Protector's head were not struck until June
or July, 1657, although they bear the date 1656. The Privy Seal warrant
says that the second £100 was not to be paid until Blondeau had actually
commenced the new coinage, and as this sum was paid him on the 2nd
July, 1657, it is obviously to be concluded that none of the money of the
new type was struck before June or July, 1657. The dies were no doubt
engraved during the latter part of the year 1656, in accordance with the
Council's orders of the 3rd and 11th December, 1656, and it was probably
intended to strike the new coins in February or March, 1656 (old style),
but Blondeau seems not to have been ready before the following July,
1657.
The subjoined item relative to the 1656 coinage occurs in Thomas
Simon's Account " for work done, and disbursements made, for the use of
His Highness and the Commonwealth," delivered to the Council in August,
1,657 :—" For Coynes, Stamps, Dyes &c 2501."
There is also £50 charged for " Iron, Steele, Smiths worke &c," and
^£200. 3 £2W. * Pelb Issue Booh, No. 92, p. 171.
98 JfflraismEtu Gnvitttllhnz.
other sums for making original drawings and attending upon the Council,
which include the preparation of seals as well as coins. See the Council
Entry Book, No. 106, p. 405.
The documents which we have just printed enahle us to dispose of
several errors into which certain numismatic writers have fallen when
describing Oliver's coins. Vertue appears to have thought that Thomas
Simon himself did the whole of this coinage, striking the money as well as
engraving the dies. He says that " some of his (Oliver's) monies in gold
and silver were dated 1656, when it appeared that Simon became perfect
master of Blondeau's secrets in milling."
—
Works of T. Simon, 1753, p. 24.
Now we very much doubt whether Simon ever discovered any of Blondeau's
secrets, and the contemporary records clearly show that he did not do
more than supply Blondeau with the engraved dies ready for coining. The
Bev. Bogers Buding- makes the same mistake, stating that these pieces
were " the work of Thomas Simon, by whom they were coined
with the greatest care and exactness by the mill and screw."
—
Annals of the
Coinage, 3rd edit. 1840, vol. i. p. 419.
The editors of the Tresor de Numismatique et de Glyptique, folio, Paris,
1834, state that Cromwell's coins are generally considered to be the work
of the celebrated French artist, Jean Warin ; but the above quoted orders
of the Council are alone sufficient to prove that Simon engraved the dies,
even if we could not recognize on the coins the numerous distinctive cha-
racteristics of his work.
II.—HlSTOEY OF THE BULLION USED.
We will now give a brief account of the bullion captured from the
Spaniards in September, 1656, a portion of which was used for the newmilled coinage of 1656-7 bearing Oliver's bust, as directed by the Council's
order of the 19th February, 1656-7.
At the commencement of September, 1656, the principal part of the
English fleet, under the joint command of Admirals Blake and Montagu,repaired to the coast of Portugal to take in water, leaving Captain Bichard
Stayner with six frigates only -to blockade the port of Cadiz. In the
meantime, a richly laden Spanish fleet arrived from the Havannah, and,
deceived by the false information of the captain of a Portuguese prize
${jt (Cnimig* nf 1656. 99
Which they had taken on the way, steered straight for Cadiz, unaware of
the proximity of the English blockading vessels. The next day, the 9th
September, the two fleets fought, the result being a complete victory for
Stayner, who at once despatched an account of the engagement to his
superior officers, Blake and Montagu. By them the news was trans-
mitted to England, and was first made public in the following newspaper
paragraph :
" Whitehall, October 1.
"About 3 hours after the Parlament was risen, we had news of a
most seasonable Success obtained by some of our Frigats ; It was brought
hither by one of our Sea-Captains, in a Letter from our Generals Blake and
Mountagu. I cannot now give particulars at large ; but in brief, it pleased
God, that on the 9 of September some few of our Frigats espyed Ships at
Sea, and making them, they proved to be Spanish, 7 in number, and with
them a Portugall prize, which they had taken ; All that night our Frigats
lay by them, being about nine Leagues from the Bay of Cadiz, and in the
morning they Fought ; the Issue was, that we burned one, sunk another,
ran 2 aground, and took two ; one got away with the Portugall-Prize into
Cadiz. These came from the West-Indies. In that ship which was burnt
was a Spanish Marquis that had been in some part of the Indies, and a
Daughter of his, whom he was going to marry to some great person in
Spain. His son the young Marquis and another of his Daughters being in
one of the Ships taken, are now our prisoners. Treasure we have taken to
a very great value. At present, we cannot be more punctual! having
neither time nor opportunity to transcribe the Letters."
—
Mercurius Politicus,
No. 329, Sept. 25 to Oct. 2, 1656.
An official account was afterwards drawn up and printed by order of
the Parliament. A copy of it, in the Author's possession, is entitled :" A
True Narrative of the late Success which it hath pleased God to give to
some part of the Fleet of this Common-wealth, upon the Spanish Coast,
against the King of Spains West-India Fleet, in its return to Cadiz, being
the substance of several Letters writ and sent by the Generals of the Fleet
upon this occasion." Ordered to be printed, the 4th October, 1656. Apamphlet in black letter, eight pages, folio.
This narrative informs us that the Spanish fleet consisted of seven
vessels, four being the King's ships, and three merchantmen, " most of
ioo Jinmisnuttu Ginmmillioa.
them richly laden with Gold, Silver, Pearle and other Commodities." The
Admiral's ship, being small, was allowed by the English to escape, but
was run on shore and sunk. The Vice-Admiral's vessel, a large galleon,
after fighting for six hours, was taken, but the Spaniards themselves set
fire to her and she went down, not, however, before a large quantity of
plate had been taken out of her by her captors. The Eear-Admiral's ship,
also a galleon, was taken, and brought off safely ; but the remaining man-
of-war, and a small merchant ship escaped into Gibraltar. The two large
merchantmen were also taken, but one of them, in the bringing off, was
accidentally burnt and sunk All this was achieved by an English squadron
of six small frigates only, and without the loss of a single vessel. Nearly
four hundred and fifty prisoners were secured, including several of high
rank, and the Spaniards estimated that they had lost bullion to the amount
of nine millions of pieces of eight. A large portion of this treasure, about
five millions of pieces of eight, was subsequently brought to England,
together with the ships and their lading of other valuable merchandise.
The letters from the fleet were read in Parliament on Thursday, the
2nd October, 1656 ; and on the following Wednesday, the 8th October, a
day of thanksgiving was kept by the Parliament in St. Margaret's Church,
Westminster. The 5th November was appointed for a day of public
thanksgiving, to be observed throughout England, Scotland, and Ireland.
In the beginning of November, 1656, the fleet arrived at Portsmouth
with the Spanish prizes. Major-General Thomas Kelsey, one of the Com-missioners of the Admiralty, was at once sent down to Portsmouth by the
Council, and the captured bullion was brought by road to London in thirty-
eight waggons, under the care of Kelsey, Captain Lloyd, and others. The
silver was taken direct to the Tower of London, and, with due precautions,
was there delivered into the custody of Captain Sharpe, Mr. Samuel
Bartlet, and Mr. Thomas Birch, on the 20th November, 1656. Among the
Interregnum State Papers in the Public Eecord Office is the original account
of the bullion received into the Tower on that day. The different kinds of
the silver are described as—ingots of "sugar-loaf" silver, " pifia " silver,
cakes and bars of silver, wrought plate, and, in Peruvian coin, pieces of 8
and pieces of £. The silver was contained in fifty-six chests, and the total
weight was 14,221 lbs. 8 oz. 1 dwt.
It is evident that this was not the whole of the bullion captured, as
ۤt tfnimtg* nf 1656. 101
William Godwin, in his History of the Commonwealth, vol. iv. p. 303, states
that the value was estimated, at five millions of pieces of eight, or upwards
of a million sterling. Secretary Thurloe also says (State Papers, vol. v.)
that the amount was nearly a million pounds originally, but that all was
plundered down to about £350,000 or £300,000 sterling.
The Protector and his Council made a contract with Sir Thomas Viner
and Edward Backwell, goldsmiths of London, by which the whole of the
Spanish prize bullion was disposed of to these merchants at fixed rates.
On the 31st October, Viner and Backwell made this agreement, and they
state, in a Petition of the 6th January, 1656-f, that before the latter date
they had paid £130,000 into the Exchequer on account of this bullion.
The greater part of the silver was melted and assayed at the expense
of the contractors, Viner and Backwell, who afterwards had it coined into
English money at the Tower mint, also at their own charge ; but a small
portion was exported. Eor the accommodation of a large sum paid into
the Exchequer immediately on the arrival of the bullion, the Government
allowed the contractors a profit of one farthing an ounce on the silver,
besides allowances for waste in the melting, etc. For details of the con-
tract, see the Council books under the dates—31st October, 1st, 4th, and
11th November, 3rd December, 1656, 5th May and 23rd September, 1657,
etc.
Two thousand pounds worth of this bullion appears to have been
excepted from Viner and BackwelTs contract, and, by the Council's order
of the 19th February, 1656-7, it was delivered to Peter Blondeau for
coinage into the milled money with Cromwell's head.
III.
—
Description of the Coins.
Having now detailed all the events relating to Oliver's money of
1656 which preceded its actual coinage in or about July, 1657, we shall
next give a description of the coins themselves, derived from a very careful
examination of the specimens at present existing in the most important
English cabinets.
There are fifty-shilling pieces, twenty-shilling pieces or broads, and
ten-shilling pieces or half-broads, of gold, with half-crowns of silver, each
bearing the date 1656. The dies of all these coins were engraved by
102 Ihmistnttb Crnraitlliaca.
Thomas Simon, and the pieces themselves were struck by Peter Blondeau
with his improved machinery.
The gold Fifty-shilling piece bears on the Obverse a fine bust of the
Protector, laureate, to the left. The neck is without drapery. Legend
—
OLIVAE • D • G • EP • ANG SCO ET HIB &c PEO • [Oliver, by the
grace of God, Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and
Ireland, etc.] Eeverse, the arms of the Protector on a plain shield, crowned
with an imperial crown. The date • 1656 " is placed above the crown,
with two of the figures on each side of the orb and cross. Legend—PAX •
QVvEEITVB BELLO [Peace is sought by war]. On the edge of the
coin is this motto, preceded by a small cross pate"e—PEOTECTOE •
UTERIS • LLTEE.E • 1STVMMIS • COEONA • ET SALVS. See Plate
III., No. 1.
The design of this piece is simple, yet very elegant, and the high
finish and delicacy of workmanship are worthy of the masterly hand of
Simon, who engraved the dies. The bust and parts of the shield and
crown are beautifully frosted. Simon's original steel punch (in relief) for
the bust on this coin is still preserved in the Eoyal Mint, London.
The portrait of Oliver on this coinage is an excellent and spirited
likeness, as may be proved by comparison with the miniatures by Samuel
Cooper, taken about the same time. Pepys, the diarist, evidently thought
the portrait on Oliver's coins a good one. He says, under date 9th March,
1662-3—"Upon my word, those (coins) of the Protector are more bike in
my mind, than the "King's (Charles II.'s)."
The titles of the Protector are the same as those on his Great Seal,
and it is to be observed that he did not continue the somewhat absurd
practice of inserting " France " among the possessions of this country. Areference to our colonies is obviously intended in the expression " etc."
after "Ireland." In legal documents they were mentioned at greater
length, viz.: "England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the Dominions thereto
belonging."
The arms on the reverse are those used by Oliver Cromwell during the
whole of his Protectorate (see woodcut on page 13, above). The heraldic
description of them would be : Quarterly of four, 1st and 4th, argent, a
cross gules, the cross of St. George, for England ; 2nd, azure, a cross saltire
€{u <Cninitgt nf 1656. 103
argent, the saltire of St. Andrew, for Scotland; 3rd, azure, a harp or, stringed
argent, for Ireland; over all, on an inescutcheon, sable, a lion rampant
argent, the paternal arms of Cromwell. The shield is surmounted by the
imperial crown of England, nearly exactly resembling the one used by
King Charles I. It is formed of six arches, springing from a jewelled
circlet, and meeting over the centre of the crown, surmounted by a moundand cross. The circlet is heightened by four crosses patee and four fleurs-
de-lis, placed alternately.
The Protector's favourite motto of Pax qiueritur hello appears on manyof his seals, as well as on the reverse of all his gold and silver coins. It
may perhaps refer to the war with Spain, which he prosecuted vigorously
during the latter years of his government, although some persons would be
more inclined to apply it to his struggle with the royalists. Perhaps a
general allusion is intended to all the wars in which he had been engaged.
The inscription on the edge of the fifty-shilling piece, Protector Uteris
literal nurnmis corona et salus, is evidently intended as a compliment to
Oliver's title of Protector, and also to express the uses of an inscription on
that part of the coin where it is placed, i.e. the edge. The exact significa-
tion of this motto is rather obscure, but it perhaps means that the letters
on the edge are a protection to the letters on the sides of the piece, and
that the inscribed edge forms a wreath or garland round the coin, and is a
safeguard to it. The letters on the rim obviously prevent clipping, and as
clipping would cut off a considerable portion of the coin, and thus destroy
much of the legends on the sides near the edge (such as the titles, etc.)>
therefore the letters on the edge would protect the letters on the sides.
The full weight of the fifty-shilling piece is 351| grains Troy, and the
metal is of the same standard as that now in use, viz : 22 carats fine gold
to 2 carats alloy, or eleven parts fine out of twelve ; being of the same fine-
ness as the gold coins of the Commonwealth's type, and those of Charles I.
(except his angel).
This is one of the rarest of Oliver's coins or patterns, and it is
commonly called the fifty-shilling piece from the fact that its weight
corresponds to the value of fifty shillings of the period, being 351J grains,
or exactly two-and-a-half times the weight of a twenty-shilling piece, 140£
104 Jhntisrantii cCrnminpllintia.
grains. We believe that no other piece of this value was ever coined in
England, and its unusual denomination and great rarity prove that it
must have been a pattern or trial piece. It is our own opinion that the
so-called fifty-shilling piece was really a pattern broad, or twenty-shilling
piece, struck on a heavier piece of metal to prevent its being taken for an
ordinary coin. This practice of making patterns heavier than the usual
weight of the coin they represented, was often resorted to, and is well
known to numismatists. "We shall meet with other examples of it among
Oliver's silver coins.
Blondeau probably at first intended to make the broads with an in-
scribed edge, like we see on these fifty-shilling pieces, which are struck
from the same dies as were subsequently used for Oliver's broad pieces.
Finding, however, that pieces of the value of twenty shillings would be too
thin to take the inscription on the edge, he no doubt abandoned his first
intention, giving to the broads a milled edge instead, as will be described
when we come to those coins.
A few patterns or first proofs of the broad piece, with the inscribed
edge, have therefore remained to the present day, and are generally known
to collectors as Cromwell's fifty-shilling pieces ; but Thomas Snelling, as
long ago as 1763,* also suspected them to be proofs of the twenty-shilling
piece, since they differ from the latter only in weight and thickness, and in
the inscription on the rim.
The fifty-shilling pieces are of great rarity, very few specimens having
been struck. There is one in the British Museum, weighing 348 -
7 grains.
Another, much rubbed, is in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, from Browne
Willis's cabinet ; it weighs only 299 grains. A third is in the collection of
the Imperial Hermitage, St. Petersburg. A very fine specimen in the
possession of Mr. Sholto Vere Hare, weighing 348 -
5 grains, was formerly
in the cabinets of Thomas Hollis, H. H. Duncombe, and C. R. Taylor. MrWilliam Brice, of Bristol, has one, in brilliant condition, weighing 3516
grains. It was formerly in the cabinets of the Earl of Pembroke and
Mr. Edward Wigan. Mr. Samuel Addington has another, very fine, weight
350 grains, which came from the collections of the Eev. J. W. Martin and
Captain B. M. Murchison. One of the finest known specimens, weighing
* View of the Gold Coin and Cqinage of England, folio, London, 1763, p. 28.
€I;b (Cuinngi nf 1656. 105
350 grains, passed through the cabinets of M. Trattle, A. Edmonds, and
Wi^'am Forster. Others were in the collections of Messrs. Thomas
Thomas, J. D. Cuff, Eichard Whitbourn, and Thomas Brown.
At public sales the fifty-shilling pieces have sold as follows :
—
M. Trattle, 1832, lot 3065, £100 ; T. Thomas, 1844, lot 814, £35 ; Earl of
Pembroke, 1848, lot 161, £76 ; J. D. Cuff, 1854, lot 1294, £41 10s. ; Eev.
J. W. Martin, 1859, lot 304, £46 ; Capt. E. M. Murchison, 1864, lot 382,
£70 ; W. Forster, 1868, lot 137, £51 ; H. H. Duncombe, 1869, lot 122,
£44 ; T. Brown, 1869, lot 608, £10 ; C. E. Taylor, 1874, lot 347, £43.
This piece is engraved in—Part iv. tab. 19, of Nummi Anglici et Sco-
tici cum aliquot Numismatihus recentioribus collegit Thomas Pembrochia et
Montis Gomerici Comes, the cabinet of Thomas Herbert, 8th Earl of Pem-
broke, quarto, London, 1746; G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753,
plate ix. BB ; T. Snelling's View of the Gold Coin and Coinage of England,
1763, plate vi. no. 16 ; Folkes's and Ruding's plates, Gold Coins, plate xiv.
no. 7.
Twenty-shilling piece or Broad. Obverse and Eeverse struck from the
same dies as the fifty-shilling piece. The coin, however, is thinner, and its
edge is milled with straight lines, instead of bearing an inscription. The
full weight of the broad is 140J grains, and its fineness is the same as that
of the piece just described. For illustration, see Plate III., No. 1.
The broad, although somewhat scarce, is one of the commonest of
Oliver's coins, and sometimes occurs in a worn and rubbed condition. Manyvery fine specimens, however, have been hoarded, and preserved in
collectors' cabinets, so that they still retain the brilliant polish claimed
by Blondeau as one of the peculiar advantages of his method of
coinage.
Our illustration, plate iii., no. 1, is taken from the broad in the British
Museum, which weighs 1401 grains. Other specimens are in the following
collections: Bank of England; Museum of the Eoyal Mint, London; Bodleian
Library, Oxford; Hunterian Museum, Glasgow; National Cabinet of France;
Collection of the Imperial Hermitage, St. Petersburg ; Eoyal Cabinet, Copen-
hagen; Eoyal Cabinet, Stockholm; and in many private cabinets. At public
sales they have sold as follows:—M, Trattle, 1832, lot 3066, £17; A. Ed-
106 Jfttmistiinin &tnmml\ianti.
monds, 1834, lot 93, £10 ; Duke of Devonshire, 1844, lot 403, £8 . 12s.
;
T. Thomas, 1844, lot 670, £8, lot 671, £6 . 16s. 6d. ; Col. Durrant, 1847,
lot 759, £4 . 16s., lot 760, £5 . 5s. ; J. D. Cuff, 1854, lot 1295, £3 . 7s. ; Rev.
J. W. Martin, 1859, lot 305, £3 . 7s. ; Capt. R. M. Murchison, 1864, lot 374,
£5 . 10s. ; H. H. Duncombe, 1869, lot 123, £4 . 12s. ; Sir George Chetwynd,
1872, lot 85, £5 ; J. B. Bergne, 1873, lot 894, £6 . 5s. ; C. R. Taylor, 1874,
lot 348, £5 . 15s.; E. Wrighton, 1874, lot 136, £6 . 2s.; W. T. B. Ashley,
1876, lot 218, £6. The usual price for a fine specimen is from five to
eight guineas.
It may be interesting to mention here that Mr. Henry William Field,
a lineal descendant of the Protector, has shown the author a fine example
of the twenty-shilling piece, one of several that have been handed down in
the family from Oliver's time.
In the British Museum is a proof of the broad struck in silver from
the same dies, and also with straight milling on the edge. It appears to
be a contemporary proof. Another proof in silver from the die of the
broad formed lot 385 of the Thomas sale, 27th February, 1844. A third
specimen, highly preserved, was in the Devonshire and Durrant cabinets
;
and one was in lot 256 of the late Mr. W. H. Johnston's sale, May,
1876. Another silver proof, with plain edge, weighing 173 -36 grains, is in
the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow.
The broad is engraved in the Earl of Pembroke's plates, 1746, part iv,
tab, 18. For other references, see above, under fifty~shilling piece, as the
two coins are identical in the types of both sides.
Ten-shilling piece or Halfrbroad. Obverse, bust of the Protector, as on
the preceding gold coins. Legend—OLIVAR • D • G • RP ANG • SCO •
HIB &c PRO. Reverse, garnished shield of arms, crowned. The date
• 1656 • above. Legend—PAX ' QV^ERITVR • BELLO. The edge is
sometimes plain, and sometimes milled with diagonal or slanting lines.
See Plate III., No. 3.
These half-broads are made of gold, of the same standard as the
broads, and they each weigh between 70 and 72 grains Troy. There are
two in the British Museum, both from the same dies, one with the edge
milled, and the other with the edge plain. They weigh 70-6 and 71-5
grains respectively ; the latter being not so well preserved as the one with
<£-{jt (Cninngt nf 1656. 107
the milled edge. A brilliant specimen of the same coin is in the cabinet
of Mr. William Bnce, the edge milled with straight lines. It is as fresh
as from the die, weighs 71'5 grains, and was formerly in the Tyssen,
Thomas, Durrant, Cuff, and Wigan collections.
From their being each about the correct weight of a current ten-
shilling piece of the period, 70J grains, and also being milled like current
coins, we consider that some of these pieces were either intended for
general currency, or that they were finished patterns for current coins.
Other specimens of this type, having plain edges, are evidently proofs.
Besides the one in the British Museum, weighing 71'5 grains (rubbed),
there is another very fine specimen from the same dies, also with plain
edge, and weighing 71 '4 grains, in the Bank of England collection, at
present deposited in the British Museum. Mr. S. Addington possesses
another, with plain edge, very fine, weighing 71'5 grains ; formerly in the
cabinets of the Earl of Pembroke, Capt. B. M. Murchison, etc. A similar
half-broad, very fine, with plain edge, passed through the cabinets of
Messrs. Dimsdale, Durrant, and Duncombe. Mr. William Forster had
-another, from the Bev. J. W. Martin's collection ; and Mr. Thomas Brown
also had one. In the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, is one of these half-
broads, with plain edge, weighing 701 grains.
The original dies of this coin, as well as Simon's steel punch for the
bust on the obverse, are still preserved in the Museum of the Boyal Mint,
London. The dies are much cracked, aud that for the reverse has had the
date altered to 1658. It is curious that so few examples of the half-broads
of 1656 are in existence, while the the twenty-shilling pieces are compa-
ratively numerous, and it is very difficult to account for the great rarity of
the former, unless we suppose that the die cracked before more than a few
proofs could be taken. It is impossible, however, to ascertain precisely at
what period they were broken.
The ten-shilling pieces are, as we have already stated, very rare. At
some of the sales by auction they have sold as follows :—T. Thomas, 1844,
lot 815, £24 . 10s. ; Col. Durrant, 1847, lot 761 (plain edge), £22 . 10s. ; lot
762 (milled edge), £10. 5s.; J. D. Cuff, 1854, lot 1296, £21; Eev. J. W.Martin, 1859, lot 306, £14. 5s.; Capt.E. M. Murchison, 1864, lot 381, £20;
W. Forster, 1868, lot 136, £20. 10s.; H. H. Duncombe, 1869, lot 126
£26 . 10s. ; Thomas Brown, 1869, lot 611, £2\.
108 #ii mi if mat it <Crammillittna.
We have not met with any engraving of this coin.
Another type -of the 1656 half-broad, illustrated on our plate iii,
no. 2, will be described further on under the head of Tanner's imitations.
Silver Half-crown. Obverse, bust of the Protector, laureate, to the
left, with drapery round the shoulders, in the Eoman style. Legend
—
OLIVAR • D G R P • ANG • SCO • ET HI &c PRO. Reverse, garnished
shield of arms, crowned ; the arms and crown like those on the pattern
broad or fifty-shilling piece (described above, page 102). The date ' 1656 •
above the crown. Legend—PAX • QV^ERITVR • BELLO. The edge is
inscribed with the motto—HAS • NISI • PERITVRVS • MIHI ADIMATNEMO, a cross patee between two dots, between NEMO and HAS. See
Plate III., No. 4.
The bust on this half-crown, as on all Oliver's silver coins, is dis-
tinguished from that on the gold coins by having drapery on the shoulders.
The portrait is an excellent likeness, and was designed and executed by
Thomas Simon ; the Roman style being adopted in pursuance of the order
made by the Council on the 11th December, 1656 (see p. 95, above). The
practice of having the bust on the silver coins draped, while that on the
gold coins had the neck bare, was introduced by Cromwell in this coinage,
and was continued by all the succeeding sovereigns, with the exception of
Anne, down to the reign of George III. This plan was supposed to furnish
an easy method of detecting silver money when fraudulently gilt to pass
for gold. Simon's original steel punches for the bust and shield of arms
on the half-crowns (both of 1656 and 1658 probably) are still preserved in
the Royal Mint.
The inscription on the edge of this half-crown, Has (literas) nisi peri-
turus mihi adimat nemo, probably signifies :" Let no one take from me (the
coin) these letters (on the edge) unless about to die ;" since the offences of
filing and clipping the edges of the coins were then punishable with death.
This motto appears to have been altered from Terence, Andria, act iv.,
scene 2, line 14—" hanc, nisi mors, mihi adimet nemo." Snelling
says that this legend was first used on the edge of a coin of Tuscany, and
refers to Ignazio Orsini's Storia delle Monete de' Granduci di Toscana, &c,
quarto, Firenze, 1756. In this book is described and engraved a teston of
Cosmo II., Grand Duke of Tuscany, coined between 1608 and 1620, which
'<&i)E C D I E a g E nf 1656. 109
had exactly the same motto on the edge—HAS NISI PEEITVEVSMICHI ADIMAT NEMO. See also T. Snelling on Pattern Pieces, in his
Miscellaneous Views, folio, London, 1769, page 50', note. It is likely that
Simon or Blondeau, thinking it appropriate, copied this motto from the
edge of the Tuscan coin.
The half-crown of 1656 is made of silver of the- old standard, the same
as that used for the coins of the Commonwealth and Charles L, viz. : 11 oz.
2 dwts. fine silver to 18- dwts. alloy, or ll'l parts- fine out of 12. The full
weight is also that of the half-crowns of the Commonwealth and Charles I.,
viz. : 232J grains Troy.
Our illustration, plate iii., no. 4, is- taken from the half-crown in the
cabinet of the British Museum. There is another in the Museum of the
Eoyal Mint, London, and one in the Collection of the Imperial Hermitagt
,
St. Petersburg. Several private collectors also possess good specimens.
Whether intended for circulation, or only struck for a pattern, the
1656 half-crown is very rare. Although not so scarce as the fifty-shilling
piece, it is much rarer than the broad. It is, however, seldom found in
very fine or good preservation ; and it is much rarer than the half-crown of
1658. The following are some of the prices from well-known sales by
auction :—M. Trattle, 1832, lot 2599, £2 . lis. ; T. Thomas, 1844, lot 727,
£3. 9s.; Col. Durrant, 1847, lot 753, £4; J. D. Cuff, 1854, lot 1283,
£5. 2s. 6d; Thomas Brown, 1869, lot 602, £4. 4s.; J. B. Bergne, 1873,
lot 890, £8 . 10s.
We have not seen any engraving of the 1656 half-crown.
T. Snelling (p. 44 of his View of the Silver Coin, 1762) mentions shil-
lings of Oliver, dated 1656, but he was probably mistaken, as no other
collector has yet met with such a coin.
IV.
—
Description of the Coining Process,
The new milled coinage of the Protector Oliver was, as we learn from
the orders of his Privy Council, entirely executed (except the engraving of
the dies) by Peter Blondeau, the French engineer, who had lately intro-
duced into this country his new and complete machinery for making coins
more perfectly than was possible by the old hand and hammer process.
His " inventions " included the rolling-mill for flattening the metal, and
no iluunsmntK (Ctnnrmsllinni.
making it of an even thickness throughout ; also tools for cutting out the
" blanks," making them all of an equal size ; the use of a screw press or
" mill " for striking the coins; and a method of giving the coins an inscribed
edge. These were not all original inventions of Blondeau's, but he brought
the milled process to perfection, and re-introduced it into England. Scarcely
any author except Thomas Snelling (View of Pattern Pieces, p. 51), mentions
Blondeau as having made Oliver's coins. Tor a full account of Blondeau
and his work before 1656, the reader is referred to the preceding section of
this work, entitled " Peter Blondeau and the Irish Mint."
The dies of all the coins of 1656, just described, were engraved by the
celebrated English medallist, Thomas Simon, as we have previously shown.
A very fine example of his work in high relief has been described on
page 9, viz. :" The Lord General Medal " (plate i., no. 4) ; but in these
coins we have equally beautiful specimens of the medallic art in low relief.
The reason for the adoption of such slight relief was doubtless the same
as that given in the present day, i.e., the prevention of excessive loss by the
wear and tear of circulation, coins with highly embossed devices obviously
suffering most from this cause. Another reason may have been the saving
of time and expense in striking the coins.
The dies, when finished ready for coining, were handed over by Simonto Peter Blondeau, who himself conducted with great secresy, in DruryHouse, the remaining processes of making the money. The method used
by Blondeau was that generally called the " milled," from its chief charac-
teristic—the use of the mill or coining-press. Cromwell was the first to
recognize the value of, and the first to make practical use of Blondeau's
machinery, but Charles II., after a brief trial of the old hammered process
in 1660-61, followed Oliver's example by engaging Peter Blondeau as
Engineer to the Mint, and employing him to make the whole of his 1662and subsequent coinages : the Eoettiers engraving the dies. A short de-
scription of Blondeau's milled process, as used in making all the national
coins from 1662 to 1695, is given by a writer of the latter date, Mr. WilliamLowndes. First, the gold or silver was cast out of the melting-pot into
long flat bars, which bars were drawn through a kind of rolling-mill (workedby a horse) to produce the proper thickness for guineas, crowns, shillings,
etc. Then with " forcible engines " called cutters, of the exact sizes of the
coins to be made, the round pieces were cut out from the flat bars. Each
€1)2 (CninngB nf 1656. mpiece was then weighed, and made to agree exactly with the intended
weight, and afterwards taken to other machines, " wrought secretly," which
put the letters upon the edges of the larger pieces, and marked the edges
of the others with a graining. The next process was the blanching, making
the blanks white and refulgent by annealing or boiling, and at last every
piece was brought to the press or mill (worked by the strength of men),
and there received the impression, which made it perfect milled money*This was, without doubt, the same system as that followed by Blondeau in
making the milled coins of Oliver.
Oliver Cromwell's were the first English coins with inscribed edges,
and the plan by which their rims were marked with inscriptions was not
made known. It is however most probable that the coins were struck in a
steel collar, with four joints, having the motto engraved on the inside. Onreceiving the blow in the coining-press, the coin would expand and fill up
the sunken device on the collar, and on opening the collar at the joints
the piece would be released. The mottoes were engraved on four separate
pieces of steel, two of them large, and two very small, which, when fitted
together with joints, formed a collar and marked the edges of the coins all
round. On examining the coins the marks of the joints may be faintly
seen, although the edging is very neatly done. The following is a copy of
the edge of the fifty-shilling piece, the perpendicular lines representing the
divisions:—SAXVS £ PEOTECTOE LITEEIS| |
LITEEiE • NVM-MIS • CQEONA • ET
|
•
|
The edging of the half-crown of 1656 was also composed of four pieces,
thus :—HAS • NISI • PEEITVEVS|
•|MIHI ADIMAT NEMO
The lines impressed on the edges of the other coins (now commonly
called the milling) were probably effected in this manner—Two pieces of
steel, each having indentations cut upon one side, were placed upon a flat
table, one being fixed down, and the other being moveable. The coin or
blank was then placed on the table with its edge between the indented
pieces of steel, and the moveable piece being then pushed along with
pressure, the coin followed its movement, and received the impression of
the indentations all round its edge.
* W. Lowndes's Report to the Treasury, 1695, quoted in G-. F. Anaell's Royal Mint, 3rd
edit. 1871, p. 2.
112 Jlttraiaraah <0ninntiBlliniur.
The milled coins of the Protector Oliver certainly do possess all the
advantages which Peter Blondeau, who made them, had previously claimed
as resulting from his method alone. We find in them the perfect round-
ness, the exact equality of size in pieces of the same denomination, the
protection of their edges by inscriptions or milling, the fine polish and
gloss, and the perfect impression of the dies, as set forth by Blondeau in
his representations to the Parliament, 1650-53 (see above, pp. 61 et seq,).
Every one who has examined these coins has observed with admiration
their beauty and exquisite workmanship, both in the delicate engraving of
the devices and in the mechanical perfection of Blondeau's process of
striking them. Simon has presented us with a bold and truthful portrait
of the Protector, executed in a simple and elegant manner, although well
and carefully finished. This likeness was no doubt modelled from life.
The face and neck are adorned with a species of minute frost-work, which
may clearly be seen on most well preserved specimens of the coins. This
kind of " mezzotinto or frosting " was only to be found on the works of
Simon (says the late Mr. Eichard Sainthill*), until it was revived by the
eminent medallist William Wyon, on a pattern crown of George III., dated
1817. The art of frosting in this manner was supposed by collectors to
have died with Simon.
Oliver's coins, both of the dates 1656 and 1658, are generally con-
sidered to be the most beautiful and the best executed in the whole of the
English series. Stephen Martin Leake remarks that they exceed anything
of the kind done since the time of the ancient Eomans.-f- Martin Folkes
calls them " exceedingly beautiful," and states that they " are universally
allowed to have been equal, if not superior, to whatever else had been
performed in this way, either here or in any other part of Europe."J
Thomas Snelling says that " all the pieces coined by the Protector are very
beautiful, being the performance of the incomparable Simon, and worked
off by the mill and screw." § The Eev. Eogers Euding also calls them'' eminently beautiful " and " coined with the greatest care and exactness.
"||
* Memoir of W. Wyon, by Nicholas Carlisle, 1837, p. 90.
t Historical Account of English Money, 3rd edit, 1793, p. 351.
X Table of English Silver Coins, 1763, p. 100.
§ View of the Silver Coin, 1762, p. 44.
11 Annals of the Coinage, 3rd edit., 1840, vol. i., p. 419,
€JIB fininngK nf 1656. H3
The celebrated medallic artist, William Wyon, made the following
observations on Oliver's coins in a lecture delivered by him on the 13th
May, 1834:—"The portraits were modelled from the life by Simon, and
are admirable for the truth of resemblance to individual nature. Alto-
gether, this series of coins presents to us some of the most beautiful speci-
mens that are to be found on our coinage, combining, with the most exqui-
site workmanship, the mechanical advantages of the mill and screw, intro-
duced about this time."*
The opinions of collectors respecting these coins are well expressed by
Mr. B. Nightingale, who says that they " have always been considered as
the most truthful, graceful, and highly-finished specimens of modern me-
dallic art. Indeed they have neyer been surpassed by any productions
of the English Mint; perhaps, we might say, they have never been
equalled." f
More recently, Mr. E. Stuart Poole, Keeper of the Coins and Medals
in the British Museum, notices them in these terms :" The great Protector,
however, caused to be designed money of his own bearing his head ....
Sjmon, the chief of English medallists, designed the coins, which are un-
equalled in our whole series for the vigour of the portrait (a worthy pre-
sentment of the head of Cromwell), and the beauty and fitness of every
portion of the work."\
V.
—
Place where the Coins were made.
We shall conclude this account of the coinage of 1656 with some
particulars of the place where Blondeau carried on the work of striking
the money. As he desired to keep his processes quite to himself, it was
out of the question to give him rooms in the Mint, or in any other part
of the Tower of London, because the jealous workmen of the Mint would
have been constantly endeavouring to discover his secrets. After naming
one or two other places, the Council finally selected Drury House, assigning
to Blondeau " the Kitchin, Larder, Cellars, Coachhouses, and such Chambers
and other Eoomes " as could be spared. See order of the 3rd December,
1656, printed above, p. 94).
* Memoir of W. Wyon, by N. Carlisle, 1837, p. 75.
+ Numismatic Chronicle, 1842, old series, vol. iv., p. 218.
t Encyclopcedia Britannica, 8th edit., 1858, vol. xvi., p, 388.
114 S? tutti s m it t ii (KinramElliniiu.
Having been some time at work in Drury House, making the coins of
Oliver dated 1656, Blondeau complained to the Council, in July, 1657,
that he had been interrupted in his work " through the pulling downe or
defaceing of some Eoomes at or about Drury House." {Council Entry Book,
23rd July, 1657). The Council of State, therefore, soon after made another
and more explicit order, confirming their previous instructions, and giving
Blondeau increased accommodation
—
"Tuesday, 17th November, 1657, p.m.—Ordered "That for the ac-
cofhodateing of Mr Peter Blondeau, in his putting in exeeuEon his newInvencon of Coyning, such Lodgings and Eoomes be assigned him at Drury
House, as the Trustees for Sale of Delinq's 1 estates, sitting there, shall
thinke fitt, and may spare; and that the s'd2 Trustees assigne him fitt
Lodgings and Eoomes accordingly; And if they shall fynd the Lower
Eoomes at Drury House (now made use of by Mr Abraham Browne) to be
prop3 for this use, then to assigne the same to Peter Blondeau, and to
appoynt the said Mr Browne some other Convenient place, for removeall of
his writeings into ; And upon order, or Warft4 given in that behalfe by the
said Trustees, or any 2 of them, the said Mr Browne is required to quitt
the sayd Eoomes, and Eemove his writeings accordingly."—Page 285,
Entry Book, No. 106.
This building, in which Blondeau set up his machinery and made the
beautiful coins bearing the Protector's bust, is called in the State Papers-
" Drury House " simply. At this period, however, there were two houses
of that name in London, and we have been unable to determine with
certainty which of the two is. referred to in the above orders. On the
south side of Beech Lane, Barbican, was a large house originally belono-ino'.
to the Abbot of Eamsey, but afterwards owned by Sir Dru Drury {temp,
Elizabeth), after whom it was called " Drury House." Prince Eupert also
inhabited it for some time subsequent to the restoration of Charles II. See
page 113 of John Stow's Survey of London, 1598> edited by W. J. Thorns,
London, 1842 ; and the engravings in J. T. Smith's Antiquities of London,
folio, 1791, and E. W. Brayley's Londiniana, 1828, vol. iv., p. 301.
The second Drury House, and the one in which we think Blondeau to
have worked, was in the parish of St. Clement's Danes, and occupied the
site of the present Drury Lane Theatre. Drury House was built in the
I Delinquents'. 2 said. 3 proper. i Warrant,
€\)i Smpnrtntinit nub (gipurtatinn nf Skllinit. H5
reign of Elizabeth by Sir William Drury, Knt., but William Lord Craven
(who lived 1608-1697) became its owner in the time of Charles L, and
partially rebuilt it. All Lord Craven's property in England, including, of
course, Drury House, was confiscated by the Commonwealth in March,
1650-51, so that it is most likely that Lord Craven's house was the one
used for the sittings of the Committee for the Sale of Delinquents' Estates
and for Blondeau's coining operations. For further particulars of Drury
House, Drury Lane, we refer the reader to Brayley's Londiniana, vol. iv.,
pp. 292-4, and Peter Cunningham's Handbook of London, 2nd edit., 1850,
p. 45.
THE IMPOKTATION AND EXPORTATION OF BULLION.
•In the year 1656 Thomas Violet, the goldsmith who had procured the
seizure of the Dutch silver ships (see pp. 31 to 33, above), published a
thick folio pamphlet, entitled
—
" Proposals humbly presented to his Highness Oliver Lord Protector
of England, 8fc. and to the High Court of Parlament, now assembled
By Tho. Violet of London Goldsmith.—London, printed Anno Domini
M.DC.LVI."
Among the representations made to the Protector in this book, Violet
prays " that an Act against Transporters of Gold and Silver out of this
Nation may be forthwith passed" {Epistle Dedicatory); and on pages 104
to 112, part i., he prints his " Most Humble Petition to his Highness and
the Parliament, for the speedy passing the Act against Transporters of
Gold and Silver, and against the cullers and melters down of the heavy
coins of this nation, and such as buy gold or silver above the price of the
Mint." It is dated " September 29, 1656."
In this petition Violet adverts to the appointment of the Committee of
Council for the Mint in August, 1649, and states that it was at the recom-
mendation of this Committee that a clause was inserted in the General
Pardon or Amnesty of February, 1652, excepting all offences committed by
any person in transporting gold and silver coin or bullion out of England
116 Jluraismnta (CinntnulUoit.
without licence, as well as in unlawfully buying, selling, exchanging, or
melting the current money (page 105). He also says that in 1651 the
draft of an Act of Parliament for the appointment of Commissioners for
enquiring into the abuses of transporting gold and silver, was drawn up
by order of the Committee for the Mint, and placed in the hands of
Mr. Augustin Garland, member for Queenborough in the Long Parliament.
This bill having been twice read in the House, it was called for again and
appointed to be finished, about the 12th April, 1(553, but as Violet says
(p f 109), "other mighty business did intervene," Cromwell dissolving the
Parliament on the 20th April.
Violet asserts that some merchants, who had been guilty of transports
ing bullion, hindered this act from passing. He also says that out of about
twenty million pounds' worth of gold and silver coins made in the Tower
between 1622 and 1645, scarcely anything remained but a little clipped
and light money. "All this gold is already transported, the currant silver
coyns all culled, and the heaviest transported or melted to make gold and
silver lace " (page 110). He adds that—" Som Goldsmiths in Lumbert
street (contrary to the law) have bought and sold Milions of Gold, till nowat last they have bought and sould all the Gold out of the Nation, and the
currant Silver coyn of this Nation is following after a great pace, and will
stil follow except a strict Law bee made to discover the offendors, and
bring them to severe justice to deterr others, there will be no mony left in
the Nation, neither gold nor silver."
—
Proposals, part i., p. 111.
Among the State Papers of Cromwell's period, now preserved in the
Public Eecord Office, London, we find several notices concerning the ex-
portation of bullion. On the 2nd December, 1656, John Child petitioned
the Protector to be allowed to export £5000 in pieces of eight ; and in
January, 1656-7, the Council of State gave permission to Sir Thomas Vinerand Edward Backwell, goldsmiths, to export £10,000 in pieces of eioht,
and fifty bars of silver, part of the prize plate captured from the Spaniards
in September, 1656, and which these two merchants had bought of the
Government by contract. Viner and Backwell were allowed to export this
amount custom free, upon their giving security before the Master of the
Mint that they would, within six months, import into this countrv the
like full quantity, and bring the same to the Tower Mint, to be there
cpined. See Entry Booh No. 105 of the Council of State.
$jj.e SmpnrtiitinE aub €xpxkiin nf SoUintt. n?
On the 12th March, 1656-7, Edward Backwell petitioned for a warrant
to transport, custom free, £400 in wrought plate ; and the warrant was
granted him by the Council on the 19th March. In April, 1657, Backwell
addressed another petition to the Protector, in which he quotes the Act of
Parliament of the 9th January, 1650-1, which gave a merchant liberty to
export two thirds of any parcel of bullion or foreign specie, previously
imported, upon paying thereon one per cent, custom, and on condition that
he caused the other third part to be coined in the Tower of London. This
law is also mentioned in several other similar petitions, until the end of
the Protectorate. For a copy of it at length, see Henry Scobell's Collection
of Acts and Ordinances, London, 1658, part ii., page 150, anno 1650,
cap. 41.
Adverting now to the importation of bullion, we find among the State
Papers a series of Propositions for the encouragement of the importation of
bullion into the Commonwealth, endorsed as received the 20th February,
1654-5. The more important of these proposals are : that a declaration be
passed by his Highness and the Council that all bullion should be freely
imported by natives or foreigners, without being liable to seizure or de-
tention upon any pretence (as was enacted in the above-mentioned Act of
Parliament of the 9th January, 1650-1) ; that no letters of reprisal should
extend to the taking away of any bullion intended to be landed in this
nation ; that convoys should be allotted as desired by the merchants ; and
that the entry of all bullion should be made to one person, appointed by
the Protector, who should be sworn to secresy. The document concludes
by urging that some steps should be immediately taken in the matter.
Nothing, however, appears to have been done until June, 1657, upon
the 8th of which month a bill for the encouragement of the importation of
bullion was read for the first time in the House of Commons, and ordered
to be read the second time on the following day (Journals of the Home
of Commons, vol. vii., p. 550). It was accordingly read for the second
time on the 9th June, and committed to the Committee for Trade, whowere to consider the bill, and fill up the blanks in it (Journals, vol. vii.
p. 552).
On Monday, the 22nd June, 1657—"Mr. Noell reports Amendments,
to the Bill for Importation of Bullion: Which were read the Pirst and
Second time ; and, upon the Question, re-committed to the same Com-
H8 Mumitmiia CtimmlVnuz.
mittee : To sit the First Tuesday of the next Meeting of the Parliament, at
Two of the Clock in the Afternoon, in the Duchy-Chamber."
—
Journals of
the House of Commons, vol. vil, p. 568.
The first session of this Parliament closed with the Protector's second
inauguration on the 26th June, and in the short and stormy second
session, 20th January to the 4th February, 1657-8, no further proceedings
were taken in regard to the encouragement of the importation of bullion.
THE TRIAL OF THE FIX IN 1657.
In the seventeenth and preceding centuries, all money made in
England was coined under the provisions of an indenture or agreement
between the Government and the Master of the Mint. In order, therefore,
to prevent fraud, and to test the correct weight and fineness of the money
so coined, a Trial of the Pix was held at intervals, and if the verdict was
satisfactory the Master of the Mint received his discharge. The trial was
thus conducted—a certain number of pieces of each denomination were
laid aside out of every coinage, and placed in a box, anciently termed the
pix, to await the trial. When thought necessary, a warrant was issued to
the Lord Chancellor and the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury, autho-
rizing them to cause a trial of the pix to be made. On the day appointed,
a jury of twelve London goldsmiths, chosen from the Goldsmiths' Company,
having been summoned, several pieces taken at random from the whole
number of pix coins were assayed, weighed and tried at Goldsmiths' Hall,
in the presence of the Lord Chancellor, and other official personages. After
comparing the coins with the standard trial plates, and ascertaining whether
they were within the remedies allowed as to weight and fineness, the jury
delivered their verdict, which was authenticated by the signatures of the
goldsmiths and the Lords Commissioners.
During the Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell only one trial of the pix
took place, on the 3rd December, 1657. Previous to this, however, the
Council of State made the following order, requiring to know where two
of the trial plates or standards were
—
Thursday, 19th November, 1657 (post meridiem).—"Whereas on the
«ht «tinl of tljB fii in 1657. 119
9th of Nov: 1649, it was ordered by Parliamt That the Lords Comrsl of the
Great Seale, and others the Comrs for tryall of the pixe money, and the
Jury impannell'd for yt2 purpose, should proceed in tryall of the sayd
moneys, by that p'ts of the Standard wch4 remayned in the Exchequor, with
that remayning at Goldsmiths Hall ; And whereas the Counsell was this
day enformed, That a tryall was made accordingly, being in respect of the
want of a sufficient p't of the Standard of Crowne gould ; and, That by an
order of the then Counsell of State,.of the 14th of Nov: 1649, The Company
of Goldsmiths were appoynted to make 2 Standard peices, The one of
Crowne gould, the other of Silver ; In pursuiance whereof they provided
the sayd peices, and divided each peice into fower indented peices, and
deliv'ed ye same in to the sayd Counsell of State ye 22th of Nov: 1649, at
w<* tyme the said Counsell of State redelivered to ye Warden of ye said
Company, one p't of the sayd peices of gould, and one of Silver; and y1
the other p't of the s'd respective peices ought to have been deliv'ed into
the Exchequor, w* was donne ; Ordered That it be referred to the Clerkes
of the Counsell to speake herein w& the Lord Bradshaw, then Lord Presid',
and Mr Gualter Frost, Sonne to the then SecT of the said Counsell, and
informe themselves, if they cann, how the other p'ts of ye sayd Standard
peices were disposed of, and to give an accompt thereof to this Boord."
—
Page 292, Council Entry Book, No. 106, in the Public Eecord Office,
London.
On the 25th of the same month the Council's Treasurer produced the
two missing trial plates, and they were ordered to be delivered to the Com-
missioners of the Treasury
—
Wednesday, 25th November, 1657.—" Mr Gualter Prost p'nted5 to ye
Counsell, this day, two plates indented, the one of Gould, the other of
Silver, being peices made for Tryall of the Standard of Gould and Silver,
by order of the late Counsell of State, and to them deliv'ed6 in Nov., 1649,
Ordered That the sayd peices be deliv'ed to ye Lords Comrs of his Highness
Th'rey,7 to be by them disposed of, to the Charge and keepeing of the
prop8 Officr of the Exchequor, in ordr to his Highness and ye Cofnon
Wealths Service as there shalbe occasion. And yl 9 Mr Gualter Frost be
discharged thereof."
—
Pages 304, 305, Council Book as above.
1 Commissioners, 2 that. 3 part. * which. 6 presented. 6 delivered.
7 Treasury. ! proper. 9 that.
120 Snmisnuita Crnrom?lluEir.
In the margin of the book, opposite this last entry, is a memorandum
stating that this order and the trial plates were sent to the Commissioners
of the Treasury on the 26th November " per Eoger Jenyns."
These standards or trial plates were most probably used at the trial of
the pix that was held in the next month, i.e., on the 3rd December, 1657,
The Warrant ordering the trial was signed by the Protector on the 9th
November. A copy of it is on fo. 29, verso, of a book preserved among the
records of the Eoyal Mint, London, entitled—" A Booke of Entries of all
the Assaies and Verdicts of ye Pixe, taken before ye Eight Honble ye Lords
of His Maties Privy Councill and others, ab initio regni Eegis Jacobi lmi &deinceps." This warrant has been printed before, but very inaccurately,
on pages 99 and 100, footnote, of the Soeiety of Antiquaries' edition of
Martin Eolkes' Table of English Silver Coins, quarto, London, 1763. It is
also quoted, from Folkes, in the Eev. E. Euding's Annals of the Coinage,
edit. 1840, vol. i., p. 72, note 10. The subjoined copy of it has been care-
fully made from the original manuscript book above-named
—
" Oliver P.
" Whereas amongst other weighty Affaires of the Cofnonwealth,
the care of Assaying and Trying of the moneys & Coyne thereof by the
Standerd of England, according to the Antient Custom of ye Eealme, beincr
not ye least, Wee, Judging it necessary That ye Tryall and Assay of the
sdl Money & Coine be forthw411 made, Doe therefore hereby signify our
will and pleasure to' be contending you forthw* to cause a Tryall and
Assay to be made of the Pix, now being in the Mint wthin the Tower of
London, by a Jury of Goldsmiths of our sd Citty of London, of integrity
and experience, to be Impanelled and Sworne on a day certain, to be byyou in that behalf appointed, in the Place accustomed w'hin our Pallace of
Westmr; and that ye Lords Comissionrs of our Tre'ary,2 The Justices of the
sev113 Benches, and Barons of the Excheqr, or some of them, bee then there
present and Counselling and Assisting unto you in ye due execucon of this
our Service.
" Given at Whitehall this 9th of Novembr, 1657.
" To our E' Trusty and E' well beloved Nathaniell Fiennes & JohnLisle, Lords Comissionrs of our Great Seal of England."
1 said. 2 Treasury. 3 several.
fKjli €t'ni nf tji* $u in 1657. 121
On fo. 29 of the same book it is stated that the trial of the pix took
place on the 3rd December, 1657, "near to the Star Chamber at West-
minster," before the Right Hon. Nathaniel Fiennes and John Lisle, Com-
missioners of the Great Seal ; Sir Thomas Widdrington and William
Sydenham, Commissioners of the Treasury ; and John Glynn, Lord Chief
Justice of the Upper Bench. The coins then tried by the jury of gold-
smiths had been made according to an Indenture under the Great Seal,
dated at Westminster the 27th July, 1649, between " the late Keepers of
the Liberty of England by authority of Parliament " on the one part, and
" Aaron Geurdain, Doctor of Phisick," Master and Worker of the Mint in
the Tower of London, on the other part. The Warden of the Mint at
the time was John St. John, Esq., and the Comptroller Thomas Bamar-
diston, Esq.
This trial was of the money coined between the 9th November, 1649,
and the 3rd December, 1657, viz : the coins of the Commonwealth's or
" harp and cross " type, which are described above, on pages 29 and 30 of
this work (not including any of those with Oliver's name and bust). They
are dated from 1649 to 1657, inclusive, and all have the sun mint-mark.
The new mint-mark of an anchor was adopted in 1658, subsequent to this
trial of the pix. The different denominations of the coins tested were
—
unites or twenty-shilling pieces, double crowns or ten-shilling pieces, and
crowns or five-shilling pieces, of gold ; and crowns, half-crowns, shillings,
sixpences, twopences, pennies, and halfpennies, of silver.
The following is a copy of the report and verdict of the jury of
goldsmiths, from the same Book of Assays in the Boyal Mint, fos. 29, and
29 verso
:
—
" Gold of ye Standerd of 22 Carretts1 taken out of ye Pix, ye Privie
mark being (The Sunne), according to the aforesd Ind're, 2 weighing—
3
1'
weight iiij ounces 5d weight IS graines,3 making in coyned moneys, con-
sisting of Unites, Double Crownes, and Crownes, ye Suihe of—137 1'. 15s,
arising in the pound weight to—41 11. 00s
. 7d
. and half farthing ; Is found
1 Carats. 2 aforesaid Indenture.
3 3 lbs. 4 oz. 5 dwts. 18 grs. Trov ; the value as current money being £137 . 15s.; a
pound weight of gold thus being coined irito £41 . 0s. Id. and a half-farthing. At present
(1876) a pound weight of gold of the same standard is coined into £46 . 14s. 6d.
122 SttmisniEta (CrntnmillintiE.
at the Assay agreable to the Standerd of the Comonwealth of England of
his Highnesse ye Lord Protector's Treasury Dated ye 22th day of No-
vember, 1649.
" Silver moneys taken out of ye same Pix, the Privy mark being (the
Sunne), according to the aforesd Ind're, weighing 237u wftl one oz. 19*1
weight,2 consisting of Crownes, half crownes, Shillings, halfe shillings, two
pences, pence, & halfe pences, ye Sufiie of—737u : 3s: 7d, arising in the
pound weight to—
3
U: 2s
: 2d : (wl)
; ffound at the Assay agreable to y*
Standerd of the Comonwealth of England of his Highnesse the Ld Pro-
tector's Treasury Dated ye 22th day of Nbvemb1 1649.
" The Verdict:
""Wee find by the Assayes & Tryalls of ye sev113 moneys above-
menconed—That they are agreable to the Standerds of the Comonwealth
of England of his Highnesse theLd Protector's Trea'ry,4 & Coven's 5 in the
aforesd Ind're,6 and in weight, Tale, and Assay w&in the remedyes or-
dained, in such manner & forme as is above expressed and declared accord-
ing to our best knowledge and discretions.
Tho: Vyner,
Wm Symonds, & al.'7
' Present—
Nathaniell Fiennes ),.,_, „ „ ,
j i r- I iLords CommK 8 of the Great Seal of England.
Sr Tho: Widrington Kn', Speaker of the Parliam4, ) Comm" of his High-
s'" Bidstrode Whitloek Kn, & W Sydenham ] nesse Trea'ry.
John Glynne, ~L£ Chief Justice of the Upper Bench."
Sir Bulstrode "Whitelock, in his Memorials, mentions his attendance at
1 weight.
1 237 lbs. 1 oz. 19 dwts. Troy; the value sa current money being .£737 . 3s. Id.; apound weight of silver thus being coined into £3 . 2s. 2d. At present (1S78) a poundweight of silver of the same standard (37 parts fine out of 40) is coined into £3 . 6s.
3 several! * Treasury. 5 covenants. 6 Indenture. ' and others.6 Commissioners.
<ffjit €rinl of tjji fi: in 1657. 123
this trial of the pix, but the date is erroneously given as the 3rd November,
1657, instead of December
—
" November 3.—I as a Commissioner of the Treasury, with many
Grandees, were present at the Trial of the Pixe in the Tower."—P. 665,
2nd edition, London, 1732, folio.
CHAPTEE IV.
INCLUDING THE YEAR 1658.
THE COINAGE UE 105X.
We shall divide our account of Oliver's coins of 1658 into four parts,
^containing: (1) the Historical Kecords relating to this coinage, (2) De-
scription of the 1658 Coins, (3) description of the Imitations of the genuine
coins, (4) remarks on the currency of Oliver's coins.
I.
—
The Historical Eecords.
We must now continue the account of Oliver's milled coins from the
period at which it was left off on page 97, i.e., the month of July, 1657
;
but it will be found that the documentary evidence relating to the coins
of 1658 is very scanty compared with that printed in the account of the
1656 coinage. In our last chapter the amount and history of the earlier
coinage are pretty well determined, but comparatively few such particu-
lars can be given regarding the pieces dated 1658.
It appears that soon after Peter Blondeau had commenced making the
1656 coinage, according to the Council's order for him to coin £2000 in
milled money, he was interrupted in his work by the " pulling down and
defacing " of some rooms in and about Drury House, where he had set up
his machinery. He therefore petitioned the Council of State, who, on the
16th July, 1657, referred his petition to a Committee for examination and
report
—
Thursday, 16th July, 1657.—Ordered "That the humble petition of
Peter Blondeau be referred to Gen1* Disbrow, Sr Gilb* Pickering, Lo:
Deputy,1 Mr Eous, or any two of them, to be by them considered of, and
their opinion reported to the Councell."
—
Page 12, Entry Book, No. 106.
A week later, the Council made a further order in the matter, as
follows
—
1 The Lord Deputy of Ireland.
€\)i iCnimtg* nf 1658. 125
Thursday, 23rd July, 1657.—"Whereas informacon is given. That
Mr Blondeau hath beene interupted in the Service intrusted to him by his
Highness for Coyning, through the pulling downe, or defaceing, of some
Eoomes at or about Drury house, wherein he was authorized to worke,
Ordered, That it be referred to the Lord Deputy, the Earle of Mulgrave,
Major Gen" Skippon, Mr Eous, Sr Gilb* Pickering, Mr Sec^,1 Genii Dis-
brow, the Lord Strickland, or any 2 of them to informe themselves of the
State of that matter, and for their better Satisfaccon to send for Mr Graves,
the Trustees at Drury house, or any other p'sons 2 as they shall see Cause,
and thereupon to make report to ye Counsell."
—
Page 22, Entry Book,
No. 106.
On the 4th August two more persons were added to the Com-
mittee
—
Tuesday, 4th August, 1657, p.m.—Ordered " That M> Secry Thurloe
.and Col. Sydenham be added to the Comee3 to whom the buisiness touch-
ing Mr Blondeau is referred."
—
Page 56, Entry Book, No. 106.
Several brief orders, fixing days when Blondeau's business should be
taken into consideration, were made by the Council on the 13th August,
27th August, 4th November, and 17th November, a.m., but nothing was
done in the matter at those meetings. At the afternoon sitting, however,
,on the last mentioned day, a lengthy order was made to enable Blondeau
to conduct a coinage of a much increased amount. The Council voted him
money to defray the cost of the tools and machines that would be sufficient
to coin £10,000 weekly, and more rooms were assigned to him in Drury
House. It is therefore evident that the Protector and his Council at this
time intended to issue a national coinage of milled money, executed by
Blondeau with his new and secret machinery in Drury House. Such a
large coinage as ten thousand pounds weekly could be nothing short of a
national one, and must have been intended for universal circulation in
England, if not in Scotland and Ireland also. There is no doubt that the
pieces with Oliver's bust, dated 1658, are a portion of the great milled
coinage thus ordered to be carried out by Blondeau.
The following is an exact copy of the Council's orders of
—
Tuesday, 17th Noyember, 1657, p.m.—-" On reading a Eeport from the
Comee4 of the Counsell to whom the humble peticon of Peter Blondeau is
1 Secretary. 2 persons. 3 Committee. 4 Committee.
125 Mvuaismaia (Crnmrnjllinnit.
referred, he thereby praying, That, for forwarding his worke of Coyning
and prepareing necessary Engins for the same, some money may be ordered
him, according to his former proposicons and the Counsells Eesolves ; The
Engines and workeing tooles p'nted1 by Mr Blondeau, as necessary to be
provided for Coyning Tenn thousand pounds weekely, being contayned in
a List annext to the Eeport, the price whereof is by him estimated at
1440 1, and the weight at 30000 Lw" 2 besides the forges, Great Hafhers,
Anviles, and other great Tooles, not accompted therein.
" Ordered, That, to the intent money may be in a readyness to be
issued out to him for provideing of the said Tooles, in a meet proporcon,
It be offered to his Highness, as the advise of ye Counsell, That his High-
ness will please to issue his Warrt3 to y« Com" 4 of his Highness Th'rey,5
for empowering and requireing them, out of such moneys as shall come
into the Eeceipt of his Highness Exchequor, to satisfy and pay (for the
purpose aforesaid) to Sr Thomas Vynor kn1, the sum of One thousand
pounds, and that the said Sr Thomas Vynor be authorized and empowered
forthw111, on Eeceipt thereof, to pay to ye s'dG Peter Blondeau 200V as
money advanct upon accompt of the said Service, and all the rest to pay
and deliv to ye said peticonr7 Blondeau, by p'cells,8 proportionable to the
value of the Tooles and utensills wch he shall from tyme to tyme bring in.
The said Value being from tyme [to tyme] certdfyed to Sr Thomas Vync,under the hand of Henry Slingsby esqr, whose certificate to be a sufficient
Warrt from tyme to tyme to the said Sr Thomas Vynor for his paying to
the said peticonr Blondeau proporconably to the Value that shalbe soe
certifyed ; and that Sr Thomas Vynor observe that Method till ye whole
10001 be issued, soe farr as it will extend, towards a quantity of Tooles and
Utensills necessary for ye Coyning of 10000 1 weekely, according to Mr
Blondeaus Invencon. And it is further ordered, That upon Mr Blondeaus
receiveing of any proporcon of the said money, for any tooles by himbrought in, as aforesayd, He the said Mr Blondeau, togeather with Charles
Eanville of Blackfryers, London, Taylor, shall give to the sayd Sr Thomas
Vynor proporconable Security that the tooles soe brought in shalbe pre-
served, and from tyme to tyme forth comeing, for his Highness Service."
—
Pages 284, 285, Entry Boole, No. 106.
1 presented. 2 pounds weight. 3 'Warrant. i Commissioners. 6 Treasury.6 said. 7 petitioner. 8 pareells.
'(EjlE C-nbrtg? nf 1658. 127
The remainder of this entry, relating to Drury House, will be found
printed in our account of the 1656 coinage, page 114, above.
The original Eeport of the Committee and the List of Tools annexed
to it, referred to in this order, do not now seem to be in existence, as we
cannot find them in the Eecord Offioe.
Sir Thomas Vynor, or Viner, was a wealthy and influential goldsmith
of London. He was knighted by Oliver at the Grocers' Hall on the 8th
February, 1653-4, when the Protector was entertained at a grand dinner
given by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen. Viner was the Lord Mayor of
London, 1653-4, and was Master of the Goldsmiths' Company during the
same period. He appears to have served the Protector somewhat like a
modern banker.
Henry Slingsby was subsequently Master of the Mint to Charles IL,
about 1670-^1678. He is frequently mentioned by Samuel Pepys in his
well-known Diary.
The following is a copy of the Warrant above-mentioned, taken from
Oliver's Privy Seal Book, No. 13, pages 193, 194. Date of document, 11th
December, 1657 ; date of inrolment, 3rd February, 1657-8.
" OLIVEE by the Grace of God Lord Protector of the Comonwealth
of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions & Territories there-
unto belonging, To the Comrs of or Tre'ary1 and all others ye Officrs and
Ministers of or Exeheqr att Westmr2 to whom theis or L'res3 shall app'-
teyne4 and to ev'y6 of them Greeting, By the advice of or Privy Councell
exp'ssed6 in their Ordr of the seaventeenth of Novenibr in this p'sent7 yeare
One thousand six hundred ffifty seaven, Or will & pleasure is, And wee
doe hereby require and cornaund you, That out of such or treasure as is or
shalbee in ye Eeoeipt of or s
d8 Excheqr you pay or cause to bee paid unto
Sr Thomas Viner kn 1, and Aldrman of or Citty of London, the surhe of one
thousand pounds of lawfull montey of England, to bee by him issued and
paid to Peter Blondeau, in the s'd Ordr of or Councell named, for p'paring9
necessary Engines for coyning in such manner and by such proporcons as
in and by the s'd Ordr is directed. And for soe doeing theis our L'res or
the Inrollm' thereof shalbee yor warr*. Given undr or Privy Seale att our
1 Commissioners of our Treasury. a Westminster. 3 Letters. 4 appertain.
5 every. 6 expressed. 7 present. 8 said. » preparing.
128 Jlintnsmittii (Crnminillinnn.
Palace of Westmr the Eleaventh day of Decembr in the yeare of or Lord
One thousand six hundred ffifty and seaven.
" Gervase Lawson, Peptie of Miles Fleetwood."
On Tuesday, the 22nd December, 1657, the Council ordered that this
warrant should pass, and the money be paid, without charge or fees, being
for the service of the State {Page 364, Entry Book, No. 106).
The only other document that we have been able to find relating to
this coinage, is an order of the Council for making arrangements to choose
trustworthy workmen, and for considering what rules should be observed
by the persons employed on the coinage. It is as follows
—
Thursday, 25th February, 1657^8.—" Upon reading of the humble
peticon of Peter Blondeau, Ordered That it be referred to the Lord
Chamb'len,1 Lord Fleetwood, Lord Mountague, Lord Disbrow, Lord Strick-
land, Lord Vise' Lisle, Lord Eichard Cromwell, Lord Jones, Mr SecT,2 or
any two of them, to p'use3 the former ordrs touching this buisiness, and to
Consider what wilbe fltt to be further donne therein, haveing respect to ye
fittness of the p sons4 to be imploy'd and the Bules to be observed touching
the same, and Eeport their opinion therein to ye Counsell."
—
Page 473,
Entry Book, No. 106.
It seems probable therefore that Blondeau completed his preparations,
and re-commenced coining in the spring or summer of 1658, then produc-
ing the milled coins of that date which are now extant. A considerable
number of them have come down to our times, but we possess no informa-
tion as to what was the quantity actually struck : we only know, from the
above-quoted records, that the Protector intended that Blondeau should
coin money to the value of £10,000 weekly. If we may suppose that
Blondeau only commenced to strike the coins of 1658 shortly before
Oliver's death on the 3rd September, 1658, that circumstance would fully
explain the stoppage of the work before any very large number of coins
had been made. However this may be, the coinage of £10,000 per weekcould mot have gone on for more than one or two weeks if indeed
so long.-*o-
1 the Lord Chamberlain, Gilbert Pickering. 2 Secretary Thurlog. 3 peruse.4 persons.
'I1)B C'flittttgB nf 1658. 12 9
II.
—
Description of the Coins.
The commonest and best known of Oliver's coins are those dated
1658, which we will now describe in detail. They are silver crowns, half-
crowns, shillings, and six-pences, all struck by Peter Blondeau from the
dies engraved by Thomas Simon,
Crown. Obverse, bust of the Protector, laureate, to the left, with
drapery round the shoulders. Legend—OLIVAE • D • G R P ANG-
SCO • HIB &c PEO. Eeverse, the usual arms (described above, p. 102)
in an ornamental or garnished shield, crowned with an imperial crown.
The date 1658 above. Legend—PAX QViEBITVE • BELLO. The
edge is inscribed with the motto—HAS • NISI • PEEITVEVS • MIHI
'
ADIMAT • NEMO ; a mullet, or five-pointed star, between NEMO and
HAS. See Plate III, No. 6.
As will be observed on examining the plate, the design of this crown
is similar to that of the half-crown of 1656, plate iii., no. 4, the only dif-
ferences being in the obverse legend and in the date. The Protector's
titles and the mottoes are explained in a previous section of this work,
"The Coinage of 1656," see pp. 102, 103.
The inscription on the edge was done by means of a steel collar
composed of four pieces, as described on page 111. The joints are shown
by the perpendicular lines in the following exact copy of the rim
—
HAS • NISI • PEEITVEVS|
•|MIHI ADIMAT • NEMO < # |
•
|
Although the crowns of 1658 are rather numerous, one or two hundred
being in existence, they are all struck from the same pair of dies. This is
proved by the fact that all the examples of the crown have the trace of a
flaw or crack in the obverse die. Most probably the die cracked in the
hardening process, and the crack, at first very slight, became wider and
wider as more impressions were struck. The late Mr. Edward Hawkins
stated that he had " not seen a single specimen of Simon's crown piece of
Oliver without some indication of the crack;"* and the author of the
present work has also found the flaw in every crown that he has seen. The
earliest struck examples show the crack only very slightly, but on the
* Rev. E. Euding's Annals of the Coinage, 3rd edit., 1840, vol. i., p. 419, note 7.
130 J! ii mis mil tit firnramillianit.
latest, the crack runs across the neck, through the drapery and the in
OLIVAE., up to the edge of the coin. Nevertheless, two or three of the
sale catalogues state that certain crowns were without the flaw, as in the
sale of Sir Eobert Abdy's cabinet, 1841, lot 398 is said to be "before the
fracture in the die." A crown in lot 369 of the Devonshire sale, 1844, was
stated to have "no flaw." In the Pembroke sale, 1848, lot 136, the crown
had "no flaw ;" and a proof, with plain edge, in the Thomas Thomas sale,
1844, was also said to be "without the flaw." These statements, however,
are perhaps not quite accurate.
All the specimens of the crown that we have seen exhibit a slight
projection on the right hand side of the figure 8 in the date 1658, on the
reverse. It may be just perceived in our illustration, plate iii., no. 6.
This circumstance has led some persons to believe that the original die was
first engraved in 1656, and that Simon afterwards altered the 6 in the die
into an 8, the little projection at the side of the latter figure being the
remains of the former 6. It is certainly singular that this is the only coin
of Oliver dated 1658 that has any projection at the top or side of the 8;
and the following story, told by the Eev. Mark Noble, gives some support
to the idea of an alteration in the die from 1656 to 1658 :
—
" The Eight Hon. Lord Hawkesbury communicated to me through the
Earl of Sandwich, some information relative to Oliver's coins, which I have
never before observed—in 1656, he coined some silver money for circula-
tion ; but finding that the people preferred that with the Commonwealth
type, he coined very little of the latter sort, in the years 1657 and 1658;
endeavouring, by this mean, to bring the money with his effigies into cir-
culation : and to save a new die, that of 1656 was altered to serve for 1658,
by cutting deeper the space between the shield and the inscription, and
also between the letters, so that it raised the letters and figures so much,
that the figure 6 might easily be altered to 8, and the whole legend appear
still more bold and conspicuous ; this scheme answered in part the end he
intended; his coins of 1656 are far the most scarce, and much better pre-
served : though the latter could not be expected to be current after the
restoration."—Eev. M. Noble's Memoirs of the Protectoral-House of Cromwell,
3rd edit., 1787, vol. i., p. 310, note.
It is not clear whether the die of the crown or of the half-crown is
-meant in the above extract, but none of the coins of 1658 present the
4§t iiuin&ftt nf 1658. 131
appearance of the dies having been altered as described. The half-crowns
of 1658 are from perfectly different dies, both obverse and reverse, from
the half-crowns of 1656. As to the crowns, we do not think that the
collector who carefully examines a well preserved specimen will be able to
detect any positive signs of alteration in the die. The letters and figures
are not higher in relief than on the other coins of Oliver, as suggested in
Lord Hawkesbury's story ; and he is also wrong in stating that the coins
of 1656 are " much better preserved," since equally fine specimens are
extant of all the coins of 1658. If the dies of the crown were originally
engraved in 1656, why do no engraver's proofs exist with that date upon
them ? There is no doubt that Simon would in that case have taken a
few proofs from the dies, as he did of many other works that he en-
graved.
The original steel dies of the crown, engraved by Thomas Simon, are
still preserved in the Eoyal Mint, London. They are both much worn,
showing that many impressions were struck from them ; and the obverse
die has the crack across it, corresponding with the flaw on the coins.
Simon's original punches for the bust and arms of the crown piece are also
preserved, and were subsequently used by Tanner to make the reproduc-
tions known as "Tanner's crowns." These pieces will be described later
on, with other imitations of Oliver's coins.
The crown, as well as Oliver's other coins of 1658, is made of silver of
the old standard, the same as that used for the coins of the Commonwealth
and Charles I., viz : 11 oz. 2 dwts. fine silver to 18 dwts. alloy, or 111
parts fine out of 12. The full weight of this piece is also the same as that
of the older crowns, 464£ grains.
Oliver's crowns sometimes occur in a worn and rubbed condition, as
if they had been in circulation. Most specimens are, however, well pre-
served, as they have been hoarded for their beauty and curiosity. They
are not rare, but, being much sought after, always realize a good price,
especially when in very fine preservation. A good specimen sells from
£2 to £5, but if extra fine is worth much more. One of the earliest im-
pressions, in very fine condition, and showing very little of the flaw, passed
through the following sales—M. Trattle, 1832, lot 2601, £9 ; Col. Durrant,
1847, lot 750,. £11 ; H. H. Duncombe, 1869, lot 101, £11. Mr. J. D. Cuff's
crown, lot 1279 in his sale, 1854, sold for £28, in the " most beautiful
132 jBnntisrautB Crnm millinnn.
preservation." At Col. Durrant's sale, lot 751, a highly preserved crown,
from Tyssen's collection, realized £9 . 5s. Another early impression of the
crown was in Mr. Duncombe's sale, lot 104, £9 . 9s. Other early-struck
crowns, with very small flaws, were in Sir W. Baynes's sale, 1867, £7 . 5s.,
and Mr. J. B. Bergne's, 1873, lot 884, £7 . 10s. A very fine specimen sold
at the Eev. J. TV. Martin's sale, 1859, for £2 . 14s., but the same coin
realized £9 . 10s. at the sale of the cabinet of a " Lady in the North," 1873.
A finely preserved crown, with slight flaw, formerly in the possession of
Thomas Hollis, was lot 147 in A. Edmonds's sale, 1834, £5. Horace Wal-
pole's specimen sold at the Strawberry Hill sale, 1842, together with a
shilling of Oliver, for £3 . 7s. 6d. The same crown sold alone for £4 . 10s.
at a sale in 1844. It afterwards became Mr. Duncombe's, and brought
£2 . 9s. only at his sale in 1869.
Our illustration, plate iii., no. 6, is taken from one of the best speci-
mens we have met with. It is now in the cabinet of the British Museum(from the Cracherode collection), and weighs 465'2 grains. It may perhaps
be a proof, it is certainly an early-struck impression, showing the flaw
but slightly, to the right of the in OLIVAE. The British Museum also
possesses two other examples of this crown. In the Bodleian Library,
Oxford, are six specimens, five being from Browne "Willis's cabinet, and
one from the Ashmole collection. This crown may also be found in the
following cabinets—Bank of England ; Boyal Mint, London ; Hunterian
Museum, Glasgow ; National Cabinet of France, the Louvre, Paris ; Eoyal
Library, Brussels; Collection of the Imperial Hermitage, St. Petersburg
(four specimens) ; Eoyal Cabinet, Stockholm ; Eoyal Cabinet, Copenhagen
;
University of Christiania, etc. Besides those in public cabinets, almost
every private collection contain sone or more specimens.
All the preceding remarks refer to the ordinary crown, struck in silver,
and with inscribed edge. TVe have observed, however, in sale catalogues,
two notices of silver crowns with plain edges, which must have been proofs.
In the catalogue of the Thomas Thomas sale, 1844, lot 382 was a crownwith a plain edge, said to be " without the flaw : doubtless a very early
impression, taken as a proof, before the injury to the die." Lot 315 of
Mr. Eichard Whitbourn's sale, 1869, was also a proof crown with a plain
edge.
There are also two proofs of this crown struck in gold, with the motto
€{je (Cninop nf 1658. 133
on the rim, and showing the flaw. One is in the collection of Mr. S. Ad-
dington, and the other in that of Mr. C. S. Bale.
The crown of Oliver hy Simon has been often engraved in various
publications, of which the following are the best known—G. Van Loon's
Beschryving der Nederlandsche Historipenningen, 1723, vol. ii., p. 433, no.- 1
;
G. Van Loon's Histoire Metallique des Pays-Bas, 1732, vol. ii., p. 419, no. 1
;
Earl of Pembroke's plates, 1746, part iv., tab. 13 ; G. Vertue's Works of
Thomas Simon, 1753, plate xiv. ; T. Snelling's View of the Silver Coin and
Coinage of England, 1762, plate xvi., no. 11; Folkes's and Muding's plates,
Silver Coins, plate xxxii., no. 4; E. Bowyer's edition of David Hume's
History of England, folio, 1806, no. 4 on a plate facing p. 482, vol. iv.
;
Charles Knight's Pictorial History of England, 1840, vol. iii., p. 556 ; H. W.
Henfrey's Guide to English Coins, 1870, frontispiece ; etc.
Half-crown. Obverse, a bust of the Protector, similar to that on the
erown. Legend—OLIVAE • D • G EP • ANG SCO - ET HIB &c PEO.
Eeverse, crowned shield of arms as on the five-shilling piece, date 1658,
and legend—PAX • QV^EEITVE BELLO. The edge is also inscribed
with the motto—HAS • NISI • PEEITVEVS • MIHI • ADIMAT • NEMO.A cross between NEMO and HAS. See Plate III., No. 7.
This half-crown is made of silver of the same standard as the crown,
and its full weight is 232J grains. The inscribed edge is struck by means
of a steel collar, in the same manner as the 1656 half-crown and the 1658
crown (see p. Ill, above), and the following is an exact copy of the edge,
the joints being denoted by the perpendicular lines
—
HAS • NISI • PEEITVEVS| |
MIHI • ADIMAT • NEMO ^ |
•
|
The illustration on plate hi., no. 7, is taken from a very fine specimen
in the Author's collection. On comparing this representation with no. 4
on the same plate, it will be at once seen that both obverse and reverse of
the 1658 half-crown are from quite different dies to that of 1656 ; but we
believe that all the half-crowns of the same date were struck from the
same pair of dies. In the Museum of the Eoyal Mint are still preserved
Simon's original punches for the bust and the shield of arms on the half-
crowns. These two punches are the same as those mentioned in our de-
scription of the 1656 half-crown. They probably served for both coins, as
the only differences are in the inscription and date.
134 #ti mis ran tit Crnmrarllinnir.
Martin Folkes and the Bev. Mark Xoble both give accounts of some
half-crowns which had the date 1658, but with the last figure altered in
the die from a 6. Folkes states—
" I have also been informed, by my Yen-
ingenious friend Mr. George Yertue that he has observed half-crowns
of this sort [1658] where the last figure of the date had been altered from
a 6 to an 8 upon the die."* In Yertue's book on the Works of T. Simon
there is, however, no allusion to such altered half-crowns. The passage
from Noble has been already quoted above, in describing the crown. But
as the half-crowns of the two dates are from entirely different dies, as
already remarked, it is most improbable that any alteration in the die
should have taken place.
The half-crowns of 1658 are scarce, but not nearly so rare as those of
1656. The former sell at £2 . 2s. to £3 . 3s., according to their state of
preservation.
The 1658 half-crown is to be found in most collections of English
coins, including the following public ones—British Museum ; Bank of
England ; Eoyal Mint, London ; Bodleian Library, Oxford (seven speci-
mens) ; Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge ; Hunterian Museum, Glasgow
;
Xational Cabinet of France ; Eoyal Library, Brussels ; University of
Leyden ; Imperial Hermitage, St. Fetersburg ; Eoyal Cabinet, Stockholm
;
Eoyal Cabinet, Copenhagen.
The following are some of the prices realized by this half-crown at
celebrated sales—M. Trattle, 1832, lot 2602, £3 . 3s.; CoL Durrant, 1847,
lot 754, £6 . 12s. 6d. ; J. D. Cuff, 1S54, lot 1284, £8 . 10s. ; Capt. E. M.
Murchison, 1864, lot 371, £2 . 4s. ; H. H. Duncombe, 1869, lot 102, £2 . 5s.;
" Lady in the North," 1873, lot 159, £3 . 10s. ; J. B. Bergne, 1873, lot 889,
£3 . 5s. ; C. E. Taylor, 1874, £2 . 7s.
The 1658 half-crown is engraved in—J. Evelyn's Discourse of Medals,
1697, page 118 ; G. Yan Loon's Beschryving der Xederlandsche Historipen-
ningen, 1723, vol. ii, p. 433, no. 2 ; G. Yan Loon's Histoire Metallique des
Pays-Bas, 1732, voL ii, p. 419, no. 2 ; Earl of Pembroke's plates, 1746,
part iv., tab. 13, but with " P " omitted after " D. G. E." on the obverse :
G. Yertue's Works of Tliomas Simon, 1753, plate xiv. ; T. Snelling's View of
the Silver Coin and Coinage of England, 1762, plate xvi., no. 10 ; Folkes's
* Page 99 of the Society of Antiquaries's edition of Martin Folkes's TaJbU of EngUsliSilver Coins, quarto, 1763.
€\)i Cninn gt nf 16 5 8. 135
and Rudinff's plates, Silver Coins, plate xxxii., no. 5 ; E. Bowyer's edition
of David Hume's History of England, 1806, no. 9 on a plate facing p. 482,
vol. iv.
Shilling. Obverse, a bust of the Protector, similar to that on the
crown and half-crown. Legend— OLIVAR • D • G • EP • ANG • SCOHIB &c PEO. Eeverse, similar to that of the crown and half-crown,
with the same date, 1658. The edge is milled with straight lines. See
Plate III, No. 8.
The shilling, as well as the half-crown, is a wonderful example of
beautiful and accurate reduction from the crown piece. The portrait is
excellently preserved throughout.
This coin is made of silver of the same standard as the crown, and its
full weight is 92f grains. The illustration on plate iii., no. 8, is taken
from a very fine specimen in the Author's cabinet. It will be observed
that there are two small flaws on the obverse, just above the Protector's
forehead, and under the letters " E P." "We have noticed similar flaws
on all the genuine specimens of the shilling which we have examined.
Simon's original steel punches for the head and arms on the shilling
are still preserved in the Eoyal Mint, London, but not his dies. This piece
is of about the same rarity as the half-crown of 1658, and sells at the
present day from £1 to £3. It may be found in most private collections,
and in the following public cabinets—British Museum ; Bank of England
;
Eoyal Mint, London ; Bodleian Library, Oxford (four specimens) ; Fitz-
william Museum, Cambridge; Hunterian Museum, Glasgow; Eoyal Library,
Brussels ; Imperial Hermitage, St. Petersburg ; Eoyal Cabinet, Copenhagen
;
Eoyal Cabinet, Stockholm ; Cabinet of the University of Christiania.
Mr. W. H. D. Longstaffe possesses a shilling which is pierced and
slightly rubbed, as if it had been worn by some adherent or admirer of
Cromwell.
Fine specimens of this shilling have sold by auction as follows
—
M. Trattle, 1832, lot 2603, £1.15s.; Col. Durrant, 1847, lot 755, £4;
Earl of Pembroke, 1848, lot 138, £1 . 14s. ; J. D. Cuff, 1854, lot 1285,
£6 . 2s. 6d„ lot 1286, £3 ; H. H. Duncombe, 1869, lot 103, £2 ; J. B.
Bergne, 1873, lot 891, £2 ; C. E. Taylor, 1874, lot 535, £4 . 2s.
A few proofs of the shilling exist, struck in different metals from the
136 jilnmhmnU (GrnntnuUtaiiii.
ordinary pieces in silver. One struck in gold, and weighing 114J grains,
formed lot 337 of a sale at Sotheby's, 8th July, 1870. A copper impres-
sion, from the same dies, but in bad preservation, was in lot 428 of the
Devonshire sale at Christie and Manson's, 28th March, 1844. A proof in
lead was in lot 113 of Mr. Burns's sale, 17th December, 1869 ; and one
in pewter was sold in lot 44 of the cabinet of Mr. C. M. Soutter,
1st April, 1870.
The shilling is engraved in—G. Van Loon's Beschryving der Neder-
landsche Historipenningen, 1723, vol ii., p. 433, no. 3 ; G. Van Loon's His~
toire Metallique des Pays-Bas, 1732, vol. ii., p. 419, no. 3 ; Bapin de
Thoyras's History of England, 2nd edition, 1733, vol. ii., p. 617, and in subse-
quent editions (but with " P E." instead of " E P.," and the " &c." omitted,
in the obverse legend) ; Earl of Pembroke's plates, 1746, part iv., tab. 13
;
G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753, plate xiv. ; T. Snelling's View of
the Silver Coin and Coinage of England, 1762, plate xvi., no. 9; Folkes's and
Ruding's plates, Silver Coins, plate xxxii., no. 7 ; Stephen Martin Leake's
Historical Account of English Money, 3rd edition, 1793, 1st series, plate vii.,
no. 65 (but with " PE." instead of " EP," and the " &c." omitted, in the
obverse legend) ; E. Bowyer's edition of David Hume's History of England,
1806, no. 6 on a plate facing p. 482, vol. iv. ; Charles Knight's Pictorial
History of England, 1840, vol. hi., p. 556.
Six-pence. Obverse, bust of the Protector, similar to that on the three
other silver coins. Legend—OLIVAE • D • G- EP • ANG SCO • HIB&c PEO. Eeverse, crowned shield of arms as before. The date 1658
above. Legend—PAX • QVJEEITVE • BELLO. The edge is milled with
straight lines. See Plate IV, No. 1.
The six-pence is made of silver of the same standard as the crown,
and its full weight is 46J grains.
Although perhaps originally issued for circulation, these six-pences are
now extremely rare. Erom some unknown cause, only a very few speci-
mens have been preserved. Martin Eolkes states that he had only heard
of four :" I have myself seen but one of them, and have not heard of
above three others, that are any where said to be now extant."—Page 102
of the Society of Antiquaries's edition of Folkes's Table of English Stiver
Coins, 1763.
®{l5 iCnhngE nf 1658. 137
A rubbed example of the six-peace is now in the British Museum,
but was formerly in the cabinet of the Earl of Pembroke. It weighs 47
grains. A good specimen, with milled edge, and weighing 46"4 grains, is
in the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow. Mr. S. Addington has a fine speci-
men, weighing 45 grains, from the Murchison, Baker, Cuff,' Edmonds, and
Trattle collections. A fourth six-pence, not fine, was in the Thomas sale,
1844, lot 829 ; and a fifth, in poor preservation and gilt, was in General
Drummond's sale, 1864, and Mr. Bichard Whitbourn's sale, 1869, lot 318.
A worn example of the six-pence was formerly in the possession of
Mr. W. B. Davies, of Wallingford, from whom it passed to a gentleman in
America.
The seventh specimen that we have heard of, is a well-preserved
proof, struck in pewter from the same dies, and with milled edge. It
weighs 404 grains, and is now in the British Museum.
A worn six-pence has sold for £5 . 2s. 6d. (B. Whitbourn's sale, 1869)
;
but a fine one for £31 (Capt. Murchison's sale, 1864), and £35 (J. D. Cuff's
sale, 1854).
Simon's original steel punches for the bust and shield of arms on the
six-pence are still preserved in the Boyal Mint, London ; but not the dies.
The six-pence is engraved in—the Earl of Pembroke's plates, 1746,
part iv., tab. 13 ; G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753, plate xiv.
;
T. Snelling's View of the Silver Coin and Coinage of England, 1762, plate
xvi., no. 8 ; Folkes's and Ruding's plates, Silver Coins, plate xxxii., no. 8
;
B. Bowyer's edition of David Hume's History of England, 1806, no. 8 on a
plate facing p. 482, vol. iv. ; Charles Knight's Pictorial History of England,
1840, vol. hi., p. 556.
III.
—
Imitations of the Pkotectob's Coins.
There now remain to be described several gold and silver coins of
Oliver, some of which have been considered to be original pattern pieces
of his time, but which we think to have been imitations or reproductions
made (with the help of Simon's old punches and dies) by J. S. Tanner, in
the reign of George II. According to Snelling and Buding,* John Sigis-
mund Tanner was one of the Engravers to the Boyal Mint from the first
* Rev. R. Ruding's Annals of the Coinage, 3rd edition, 1840, vol. L, p. 45.
138 JO unit s
m
e i a ^rnramtlliann.
to the thirty-first year of George II., or about 1727, to 1758; and we
believe that he reproduced several of Oliver's coins by striking new dies
from Simon's old punches, which were then, as now, preserved in the Mint.
The universally received account of the well-known piece called " Tanner's
Crown" confirms our theory. It is said to have been struck, about 1738,
" from Simon's dies, repaired by Tanner ;" but this obviously means that
Simon's punches were used to make new dies (as Dr. Combe states in the
Appendix to Vertues Simon).
It must here be understood that when Simon set to work to engrave
his dies, he first cut the designs (i.e., the bust and the crowned shield of
arms) in relief on pieces of steel called punches. These punches were
hardened, and then impressed on soft steel to make the sunken dies. The
lettering or inscriptions having been cut in these dies, they were hardened
in their turn, and were then ready for striking the money. Therefore,
since all Simon's punches remained in the Mint, Tanner probably impressed
them on new pieces of steel, engraved the legends around the bust and
arms, and thus made new dies, from which several proof coins were struck
and sold to collectors.
It is to be observed that of the pieces which we consider to have been
made by Tanner in this way, all (except the crown) omit the " &c." before
" PEO." on the obverse, and the style of the lettering is alike upon all,
though differing very much from the workmanship of the coins that are
undoubtedly Simon's, described above.
There are two half-broads, or ten-shilling pieces, of gold, both without
the " &c." before " PEO.," and on which the style of the lettering exactly
resembles that on Tanner's crown. We will now describe them.
Tanner's Half-broad, No. 1. Obverse, bust of the Protector, laureate,
to the left, with bare neck, as on the other gold coins. Legend—OLIVAED G E • P • A2fG SCO • HIB PEO (There is no dot after PEO, nor
any after D or G, as there should be, but a dot is placed between E and
P, contrary to Simon's usual plan). Eeverse, garnished shield of arms,
crowned. Date • 1656 • above. Legend—PAX - QV^EEITYE • BELLO.Diameter, *95 inch ; edge plain. See Plate iii., Xo. 2.
The obverse die of this coin appears to have been engraved by Tanner,
who, however, used Simon's punch of the head, which is still preserved in
<&]u (Cninngr nf 1658. 139
the Eoyal Mint. It is not likely that Simon would have made the mistake
of omitting the " &c." after " fflB.," and, moreover, the lettering is more
clumsy, being evidently Tanner's work. Neither is the bust frosted, as on
Simon's coins.
For the reverse Tanner used Simon's die of the reverse of his 1656
half-broad, described above on p. 106, and see plate iii., no. 3. If carefully
compared, the reverses of these two 1656 half-broads (plate iii., nos. 2
and 3) will clearly be seen to be from exactly the same die. This die, as
well as Tanner's die of the obverse, is still kept in the Eoyal Mint.
The half-broads of this type. Tanner's No. 1, are struck on larger
pieces of metal (iVth of an inch larger) than the original ones made by
Simon, and are not nearly so well finished. They are extremely rare. All
the specimens we have met with have their edges plain, and are of very
irregular weights. One in the British Museum weighs 98 grains, and
exhibits several cracks or flaws in the dies, which may be seen in the
illustration, plate iii, no. 2. A specimen passed through the sales of
Mr. Richard Whitbourn, lot 323, and Mr. C. B. Taylor, lot 349. It re-
sembled the Museum half-broad with regard to cracks, flaws, and plain
edge, and weighed 101 grains. Another example of this type, also with
plain edge, but heavier, formed lot 322 of Mr. Whitbourn's sale. A fourth
specimen is in the Hunter collection, at Glasgow University ; it has the
edge plain, and weighs 105 -9 grains.
All these four pieces are of gold, but Mr. Martin I. Preston, of Not-
tingham, possesses a proof of this half-broad struck by Tanner in silver.
It is exactly similar to the gold one in the British Museum, having the
same flaws and a plain edge, but it weighs 87 grains. It was formerly in
Miss Bichardson Currer's cabinet.
This coin, in gold, sold at Mr. B. "Whitbourn's sale, 1869, lot 322
(fine), for £4 . 5s., and lot 323 (very fine), £11. At Mr. C. E. Taylor's sale,
1874, lot 349 realized £10 . 2s. 6d.
We are not aware that this piece has ever been engraved.
Tanners Half-broad, No. 2. Obverse, exactly similar to Tanner's half-
broad, no. 1, this side being from the same die. Beverse, crowned and
garnished shield of arms, as before, but with the date 1658 above. Legend
—
PAX QV^BITVE • BELLO. Diameter -95 inch. The edge is some-
times plain, sometimes milled. See Plate iii., No. 5.
140 jinmisnitttE (GrnraitUiami.
In making the reverse die of this piece, Tanner evidently used Simon's
punch of the crowned shield of arms, which is still preserved in the Mint.
The date and inscription, however, are entirely engraved by Tanner, and in
workmanship and finish the reverse of this coin is far inferior to Simon's
reverse of the 1656 half-broad.
Both of Tanner's dies for this half-broad, no. 2, are still in the Eoyal
Mint ; the obverse die being the same as that of the obverse of Tanner's
no. 1 half-broad. The reverse die is very much cracked ; and the shield of
arms is from Simon's punch for his six-pence, also used by Tanner for the
imitation six-pence, described below.
The half-broad of 1658 is very rare. In the Bodleian Library, Oxford,
are two examples, both with milled edges, and weighing 72 and 69£ grains
respectively. They were from Browne Willis's collection. Another one,
also with milled edge, weighing 70 grains, was in Mr. J. B. Bergne's sale,
1873, lot 895.
A similar half-broad, but with plain edge, is in the British Museum,and weighs 71 -
7 grains. Another, also with plain edge, is in the Fitz-
william Museum, Cambridge, weight 73 grains. A third is in the collec-
tion of the Imperial Hermitage, St. Petersburg, weight 87 grains. Mr.
William Brice has one, as fine as when struck, edge plain, weight 71"6
grains. Euding's illustration, Supplement, plate vi., no. 26, is taken from
a specimen formerly " in the collection of the late John Sawbridge, Esq,,
of Ollantigh, in Kent," weight 69 grains. Several other specimens mayalso be traced in sale catalogues.
Mr. Brice also possesses a very curious proof in copper of this half-
broad. It is slightly rubbed, and came from Hugh Howard's collection,
lot 237, where it was erroneously catalogued as a farthing.
The gold half-broads of 1658 have sold at auction sales from £10 . 15s.
(Bergne, 1873), to £12 . 5s. (Gott, 1866, and Jackson, 1872).
This piece is engraved in—G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753,plate ix. A (but it erroneously reads OLIVAEI. on the obverse, and omitsthe garnishing of the shield) ; T. Snelling's View of the Gold Coin andCoinage of England, 1763, plate vi., no. 15 (the garnishing also erroneously
omitted); and the Supplement to Folkess and Ruding's plates, plate vi, no. 26.
As we have endeavoured to explain above, it appears most probable
€{ie C'liinngB nf 1 65 8. 141
that only the 1656 half-broads with the " &c." in the obverse legend were
coined in Oliver's time, and that the two types without the " &c.," dated
1656 and 1658, were made in George II. 's reign by J. S. Tanner. The two
half-broads here called Tanner's, are struck on pieces of metal slightly
larger than Simon's, plate iii., no. 3. The old writers on English coins tell
us very little about the half-broads. Martin Folkes did not seem to have
met with any, as he says :" I am told there was also a Die cut for Ten-
Shilling Pieces."* In a later edition of his work he states :" I have seen
the puncheon that was cut for a ten-shilling piece ;"f and again that
" there is remaining in the Tower a puncheon for the head of a ten-shilling
piece, but I never heard of any such piece actually minted."^
Thomas Snelling, in his View of the Gold Coin and Coinage of England,
1763, page 28, thus construes the remarks of Folkes :" There are likewise
ten shilling pieces, but not struck in his (Oliver's) time ; but since the
discovery of the dye or puncheon by Mr. Folkes, at whose instance chiefly,
we presume, those we have at present owe their being." However, Folkes
himself does not say that he discovered the puncheon, but simply that he
had seen it.
Tanners Crown (silver). Obverse and reverse similar to Simon's
crown (described above, p. 129) ; but upon a close examination some
minute differences will he perceived. The two coins are clearly from
different dies : the busts are different in finish, and the lettering differs in
style. On the obverse there are dots after HIB. and after PEO. on
Tanner's crown, but not on Simon's. The point of the highest leaf in the
laurel wreath comes between the A and the N of ANG. on Tanner's crown,
but on Simon's it comes between the two strokes of the A. On the reverse,
the frosting of the crosses on the shield is different : as in Tanner's crown
it is expressed by lines crossing one another diagonally, but in Simon's by
a kind of granulation. The differences will be best understood by a com-
parison of the illustrations, plate iv., no. 2 (Tanner's crown), with plate iii.,
no. 6 (Simon's crown). The edge of Tanner's crown is sometimes plain,
hut more often bears the motto HAS NISI, etc., copied from Simon's; the
lettering, however, is not so well done.
* Table of English Gold Coins, 4to, London, 1736, p. 8.
+ Society of Antiquaries's edition of Folkes'a Table of English Qold Coins, 1761, p. 9.
% Soo. Ant.'s edit, of Folkes's Table of English Silver Coins, 1763, p. 102.
142 Smnismntc (KrnmmiUioa.
This piece is certainly struck from new dies engraved by Tanner, but
he evidently used Simon's punches in making them. In the Museum of
the Eoyal Mint there are still preserved—1. Punch, in reblef, for the bust
of the crown (Simon's). 2. Punch for the crowned shield of arms on the
crown, also by Simon. 3. Simon's original die of the obverse of his crown,
cracked and worn. 4. Simon's original die of the reverse of his crown,
also worn. 5. Tanner's die of the obverse of his crown. 6. Tanner's die
of the reverse of his crown.
As the two distinct pairs of dies, Simon's and Tanner's, may still be
seen at the Mint, it is quite incontestable that these two varieties of crowns
were struck from different dies. Nevertheless, it has generally been in-
correctly stated in sale catalogues that " Tanner's crown was struck, about
1738, from Simon's dies, after they had been repaired by Tanner."
The editor of the second (1780) edition of George Vertue's Works of
Thomas Simon, followed by Buding, confuses the history of Tanner's crown
with another imitation known as the Dutch crown. The word " Tanner's"
should be substituted for " Dutch " in the following account—" In the
Tower are not only Simon's two dies of the true crown of Oliver Cromwell
but likewise the puncheons by which they were made : the dye of the
obverse being much cracked, Mr. Arundel, master of the Mint, got Mr.
Tanner, the engraver, to make two new dyes from Simon's puncheons, in
order that a few might be struck to give to his friends. These new dyes
still remain ; and in order to be more certain of the thing, I carried with
me what is called the Dutch crown, which I found exactly fitted these
dyes."* However, as we have before stated, the dies in the Mint, are of
Simon's and Tanner's crowns only, and not of the Dutch crown.
The crowns made by Tanner could not have been numerous, as they
are very rare, and sell for six or seven guineas each. They are struck in
silver, but are of irregular weights. One in the British Museum weighs
498 grains. Mr. W. Brice has one, with plain edge, weighing 477A orains
and another, with the motto on the edge, weighing 452 grains. Mr. J. P.
Neck has a specimen, with plain edge, weighing only 418 grains • and wehave seen another weighing 491 grains. Mr. J. B. Bergne had one, with
* Page 78, Appendix to the 2nd edition of Vertne, 1780. See alao Rev. E. Ruding'sAnnals of the. Coinage, 3rd edition, 1840, voL ii., p. 336.
€\)i Gnimtg* nf 1658. 143
plain edge, weighing 473\ grains, and another, with inscribed edge, weigh-
ing 477| grains.
The Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, is particularly rich in specimens
of Tanner's crown, probably because Dr. Hunter, who collected this cabinet,
was a contemporary of Tanner, and obtained these pieces directly from him.
The Hunterian Museum contains two specimens of Tanner's crown, with
plain edges, weighing 46577 grains and 363 -09 grains respectively; and a
third example, with inscribed edge, weighing 431 -2 grains. The same
collection also contains a curious proof of Simon's crown (see plate hi.,
no. 6), evidently struck by Tanner from Simon's old dies, showing their
great decay, and with the flaw right across the obverse. It weighs 664"44
grains.
Tanner's crown has sold as follows at the principal auction sales
—
Willett, 1824, £6 . 6s. ; Trattle, 1832, lot 2605, £3 ; Thomas, 1844, lot 379,
with inscribed edge, £3 . 13s. 6d., lot 380, with plain edge, £4 . 18s. ; Dur-
rant, 1847, lot 752, £6 . 12s. 6d. ; Cuff, 1854, lot 1282, £5 . 2s. 6d. ; Murchi-
son, 1864, lot 380, £5. 2s. 6d.; Forster, 1868, lot 134, £5. 10s.; Bergne,
1873, lot 886, with plain edge, £7 . 12s. 6d., lot 887, with inscribed edge,
£7 ; Johnston, 1876, lot 259, with inscribed edge, £6 . 17s. 6d.
Tanner's Shilling. Obverse, bust of the Protector, laureate, to the left,
with drapery, similar to Simon's shilling. Legend—OLIVAR 'DG'EP'AN"G • SCO HIB • PBO (no dots after D, B, or PEO). Beverse, crowned
shield of arms, as on Simon's shilling, with the date 1658 above. Legend
—
PAX • QViEELTVB • BELLO. Edge generally plain, but sometimes
milled. See Plate iv., No. 3.
The remarks made about the workmanship of Tanner's other coins
apply to this piece also. The execution and style of the lettering differ
very much from Simon's, but exactly resemble the workmanship of Tanner's
crown. The dies of this shilling still remain in the Boyal Mint, as well
as Simon's original punches for the head and arms. It is therefore our
opinion that Tanner made the dies of this piece, using Simon's punches,
but engraving the legends himself.
Tanner's shillings are struck in silver, but on pieces of metal of very
irregular weights. They have generally the edges plain, but a few specie
mens have them milled. Some, weighing 162, 155, or 153£ grains, or
144 # a mis nut a CrumnnUiaun.
nearly twice the -weight of a current shilling of the period, are commonly
called pattern two-shilling pieces (diameter, 1*15 inches). Others, a little
smaller (diameter, 1*1 inches), hut from the same dies, weigh 93 grains,
the correct weight of a shilling, or less, as 86J, 85j, or 73i grains re-
spectively.
The accounts of these pieces given by numismatic writers are confused
and erroneous. They again make the mistake of calling Tanner's imitations
Butch coins. The editor of the second edition of Vertue says—" There are
two pieces,* commonly supposed to be Dutch, the smallest of which is
often called the nine-pence, and sometimes admitted as a substitute for the
six-pence, which is exceeding scarce. As the dyes of both these pieces
still remain in the Tower, I suppose them to have been intended for a shil-
ling and six-pence, but laid aside, as was the first half-broad, on account of
the fyc. being left out of the inscription on the obverse; consequently, they
must be put among the patterns."-f
The Rev. E. Euding makes the following remarks concerning this
shilling by Tanner—" As this coin wants &c. after HIB., I suspect that it
was struck from a die which still remains in the Tower, and which Dr.
Combe supposes to have been intended for a shilling, but to have been
laid aside on account of that omission. A note to the Antiquaries' expla-
nation of this piece says :' Whether this was designed for a trial-piece of
two shillings, to which it exactly answers in weight [188 grains], or a
medal, is uncertain, no reverse of it having yet occurred.'! In Mr. "Willett's
cabinet is a Shilling of work like this with a reverse. There is also in the
Tower another die, which is often called The Mnepence. Pieces struck
from this are sometimes admitted as a substitute for the sixpence, which is
exceedingly scarce. Coins from these two dies are commonly supposed to
be Dutch."
—
Annals of the Coinage, 3rd edition, 1840, vol. ii, pp. 335, 336.
The coins struck from the dies of what we have named above Tanner's
Shilling are very rare. Of the heavier pieces, commonly called pattern
two-shillings, one with a plain edge, and weighing 1534 grains, is in the
British Museum. Another, with plain edge, and weighing 155-5 grains, is
* Described as Tanner's shilling and six-pence in the present work. H. TV. H.
t Page 78, Appendix to G. Tertne's Works of Thomas Simon, 2nd edition, 17S0.
J Society of Antiquaries's edition of Martin Folkes's Table of English Silver Coins, 1763.
p. 96.
fjlB (Cninngi nf 1658. 145
in the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow. Mr. S. Addington has another, also
with plain edge, weighing 162 grains, it was formerly in the Cuff and Mur-
chison cabinets. Mr. "W. Brice has a very fine specimen, with plain edge,
weighing 153*5 grains. Another, weighing 155 grains, passed through the
Trattle, Thomas, and Durrant collections. At the sale of the cabinet of the.
Rev. J. Lewin-Sheppard, 1860, lot 170 was a so-called two-shilling piece,
with plain edge, weighing 155 grains, which sold for £14 . 14s. In Mr.
B. Whitboum's sale, 1869, lot 316 was another, which realized £10. One
with plain edge,weighing 155 grains, formed lot 81 in a sale at Sotheby's,
25th March, 1874, £16.
Lighter impressions from the same die, called pattern shillings, are
quite as rare. The British Museum contains one, weighing 86'6 grains,
which has the edge milled with straight lines. Another, with plain edge,
weighing 85'4 grains, is in the "Wisbeach Museum. A third formed lot 153
at the sale of A. Edmonds' cabinet, 1834, £23. In the Bev. J. "W. Martin's
sale, 1859, lot 311 was a shilling of this type, weighing 73'5 grains, £2 . 10s.
Another, with milled edge, weighing 93 grains, was in the Cuff sale, 1854,
lot 1289, £9. One, also weighing 93 grains, was in a sale at Sotheby's,
25th March, 1874, lot 82, £5 . 15s.
The two-shilling piece is engraved in Folkes's and Ruding's plates,
Silver Coins, plate xxxii, no. 6 (obverse only), and in Buding's Supplement,
plate G, no. 3 (both sides) ; and the shilling on Buding's plate G, no. 2
(but with " &c." erroneously inserted in the obverse legend).
In the Gentleman's Magazine for September, 1786, is described and
figured a curious copper coin of Oliver, which is there called a half-penny
It really, however, seems to be a copper impression from the dies of
Tanner's shilling of Oliver, as the obverse legend reads " HIB. PBO."
without the " &c." The piece has slipped on the die, and some of the
letters are, therefore, double struck. In the October number, Mr. T. Bowpoints out that this coin is only a piece of copper minted from the dies of
Oliver's shilling ; but it does not appear what subsequently became of the
coin. See the Gentleman's Magazine, vol. lvi., part ii., pages 752, 753, and
822, and plate i., fig. 3, September, 1786.
Tanner's Six-pence. Obverse, draped bust of the Protector, laureate,
to the left, similar to that on Simon's six-pence. Legend—OLIVAB • D •
146 iiJnmismntE CxtwmUiaia.
G E P • ANG • SCO • HIB • PEO (no dots after G or PEO). Eeverse,
crowned shield of arms, as on Simon's six-pence, with the date 1658 above.
Legend—PAX • QV^EEITVE • BELLO. Diameter, one inch, or nearly
one-tenth of an inch larger than Simon's six-pence. See Plate iv., No. 4.
The dies of this piece were made by Tanner from Simon's original
punches of the bust and arms, which are still kept in the Mint. The
punch of the shield of arms is the same as that used by Tanner in making
the reverse of his 1658 ten-shilling piece. Tanner's dies of this six-pence,
now broken, are also preserved in the Mint.
Although rare, this is the commonest of Tanner's imitations. A good
many specimens exist, all struck in silver, and generally with plain edges,
but a few are milled. They are heavier than the contemporary six-pence
of Simon's time, which ought to weigh 46j grains. Tanner's six-pences
vary from 51 to 102 grains.
As will have been observed from the passages quoted above, under
the description of Tanner's shilling, the piece now under consideration has
been commonly called a pattern nine-pence ; but this name is quite inap-
plicable, since the coin is an obvious imitation of the six-pence in size
and type, and only a few specimens are of the weight suitable to a nine-
penny piece.
One of Tanner's six-pences, with milled edge, is in the cabinet of
Mr. S. Addmgton, and weighs 89 grains. Another, with milled edge, wasin the sale of the Eev. W. Browne's cabinet, 1827, lot 292, £19. Oneweighing 89 grains, milled edge, was in Mr. J. D. Cuffs sale, 1854, lot 1292,
£4 . 7s. Another with milled edge formed lot 109 in Miss Eichardson
Currer's sale, 1862, £6 . 2s. 6d. One in Mr. C. E. Taylor's sale, 1874, sold
for £4 . 2s., lot 539, with milled edge.
Most specimens, however, have plain edges, as the following—British
Museum cabinet, weighing 89 -
8 grains ; Bodleian Library, Oxford, weighing
63 grains, from Browne Willis's cabinet ; Hunterian Museum, Glasgow,
weighing 93-5 grains; Imperial Hermitage. St. Petersburg, 91 grains. Mr. W.Brice has one, weighing 96"5 grains. Another is in Mr. S. Addington's col-
lection. Mr. T. M. Simkiss, of Wolverhampton, has one, weighing 86-5
grains. Another specimen, weighing only 59"5 grains, is in the cabinet
of Mr. Martin I. Preston, Nottingham.
Specimens were also in the following auction sales—M. Trattle, 1832,
€j)B (Cnimt-gB nf 1658. 147
lot 2607, £7 . 7s., lot 2608 (weighing 80 grains), £5 . 15s. 6d. ; T. Thomas,
1844, lot 384 (88 grains), £5 . 5s. ; J. D. Cuff, 1854, lot 1291 (96 grains),
£5 . 12s. 6d., lot 1293 (66 grains), £3 . lis. ; Eev. J. W. Martin, 1859,
lot 310 (93 grains), £4 . lis. ; Capt. E. M. Murchison, 1864, lot 377
(51 grains), £3 . 7s. 6d., lot 378 (83| grains), £3. 7s. 6d.; T. Brown, 1869,
lot 606, £4. 16s., lot 607 (lighter), £3. 12s.; J. B. Bergne, 1873, lot 892
(102 grains), £5 . 5s., lot 893 (58 grains), £5 ; W. T. B. Ashley, 1876, lot
176, £5 . 10s. ; and many other sales.
The specimen of Tanner's six-pence in the British Museum is en-
graved in the Bev. B. Buding's Annals of the Coinage, Supplement, plate G,
no. 4.
The Dutch Crown. The so-called " Dutch Crown" of Oliver Cromwell
is also an imitation of the original crown, but not by Tanner, as it is
generally supposed to have been made in Holland. It differs chiefly from
Simon's crown (described on p. 129, above) in workmanship and execution.
It is similar in the size, type, and inscriptions, and is exceedingly well
copied. The chief differences are in the style of the lettering, which is
less elegant than Simon's, and in the head of Oliver, which is thinner, and
different in expression. The top of the laurel wreath ends under the letter
N of " ANG-." in the Dutch crown, but under the letter A in Simon's.
However, the best idea of the differences between the two coins will be
gained by a comparison of our illustrations : plate iii., no. 6 (Simon's
crown), and plate iv., no. 5 (the Dutch crown)
.
The edge of the Dutch crown is inscribed with the motto—HAS •
NISI • BEEITVBVS • MIHI • ADIMAT • NEMO, with a star at the end.
This motto is nevertheless very badly and irregularly struck on nearly
every specimen. This piece is made of silver, but is heavier than Simon's
crown. Most specimens weigh about 490 grains, while Simon's crown
never weighs more than 465 grains. The Dutch crown often occurs in
silver gilt, but we have never heard of one struck in gold.
In the British Museum is a very fine Dutch crown, weighing 490
grains. A fine one, weighing 5037 grains, is in the Hunterian Museum,
Glasgow. Mr. W. Brice has another, weighing 48 9J grains. Mr. J. F.
Neck possesses one, with the motto on the edge unusually well struck,
weighing 502 grains. Mr. Mark F. Wilson has a specimen, which has
148 Jfttraisrantfl <Pr nmmslliiiiiit.
been gilt, weighing 492 grains. Others which we have seen weighed 485,
489, and 48 91 grains respectively.
The Dutch crown is not only far more rare than Simon's, but also
scarcer than Tanner's crown. The subjoined are some of the prices
realized at auction sales by the Dutch crown—A. Edmonds, 1834, lot 148,
£3. 4s.; T. Thomas, 1844, lot 381, £2. 10s.; J. D. Cuff, 1854, lot 1281,
£5 ; Hon. Mrs. Grieve, 1862, £7 . 5s. ; Capt. E. M. Murchison, 1864, lot
373, £4 . 4s. ; E. Whitbourn, 1869, lot 314 (gilt), £3 . 10s. ; T. Brown, 1869,
lot 603, £5 . 5s. ; lot 604 (gilt), £3 . 15s. ; Sir George Chetwynd, 1872, lot
147 (gilt), £2 . 8s. ; J. B. Bergne, 1873, lot 888, £8 . 5s. ; W. T. B. Ashley,
1876, lot 175, £10 . 5s.
The Editor of the second edition of Vertue and the Eev. E. Euding
mention the Dutch crown, but they both confuse it with Tanner's crown*
They, however, quote the generally received opinion "that the Dutch
crown was done in Holland in imitation of the English one." This seems
very probable, especially as several medals of Oliver were also engraved in
that country, which are described in another part of this work. The
common opinion of collectors at the present time is also that the Dutch
crown was made in Holland. But we must not omit to notice a rather
puzzling statement in Willis's Current Notes for 1857, which appears to be
founded on a paragraph in the Northampton Mercury for 1738 :
—
" The dies of a crown piece, certainly of the time of the Protector,
and of English work, were found in Flanders by an English Connoisseur,
in 1738, and brought to England. Permission was obtained from the
Master. of the Tower Mint, and, on August 4th of that year, nearly two
hundred pieces were struck, in gold and silver, for the cabinets of Col-
lectors. They now rarely occur ; one in Mr. Cuff's sale, no. 1281, sold for
five pounds."
—
Willis's Current Notes for ApriL 1857, page 31.
The following newspaper paragraph is quoted in the Numismatic
Chronicle, old series, vol. xi., p. 103
—
" Northampton Mercury, July 10th, 1738.
" London, July 6.
" A Curious Dye of Oliver Cromwell, cut in London during his Usur^
* See above under " Tanner's Crown j" and also page 78 of the Appendix to the 2ndedition of Vertue, 1780 ; and K.uding's Annals of the Coinage,, 3rd edition, 1840, vol. ii., p. 336.
€\t CnittngB nf 1658. 149
patkm, was lately purchas'd in Flanders, and brought to the Tower, where
the Hon. Eiehard Arundell, Esq. has given leave for a certain Number to
be struck in Gold and Silver for the Curious."
It will be observed that these two accounts are very similar, and both
state that the dies in question were of English work and engraved in the
time of Cromwell. If the Dutch crown is meant, these statements are not
quite correct, for that piece is not apparently the work of any English
artist, nor does it appear why a die engraved in London should be after-
wards found in Flanders. At the same time it must be recollected that
these accounts from Willis's Current Notes and the Northampton Mercury
will not suit either of the other two crowns of Oliver, Simon's or Tanner's.
There is a curious mistake somewhere, but we think the commonly received
account the most probable, viz. : that the Dutch crown was engraved in
Holland in imitation of Simon's English one. Whether the impressions
from the Dutch dies were struck in Holland or in England it is impos-
sible to say, and the period when they were struck is uncertain, but might
perhaps be within twenty years of 1658.
Imitation Shillings. The Eev. E. Euding, quoting John Pinkerton's
Essay on Medals, vol. ii., p. 138* mentions forged shillings of Oliver,
evidently contemporary productions, intended for circulation, and not for
the coEector.
There is in the British Museum an imitation shilling of Oliver, which
is., perhaps, one of these contemporary forgeries. It is of silver, not cast,
but struck from steel dies, which are, however, very rudely engraved. In
the designs and inscriptions this piece is similar to the common shilling
made by Simon (plate iii., no. 8), but the portrait and the shield of arms
are very badly done. The edge is milled with straight lines.
Another rude imitation of the shiEing, similar to that in the British
Museum, formed lot 1290 in the sale of Mr. J. D. Cuff's collection, 1854,
and sold for £2 . 3s. It weighed 96 grains, and was also probably a con-
temporary forgery.
It is of course unnecessary to do more than mention the common
casts and electrotypes which are made from many of Oliver's coins, either
* See also the third edition, London, 1808, vol. ii., p. 174, note.
150 Humisniatii Cromnnlliinin.
to serve as substitutes for the rare originals or to impose upon ignorant
collectors.
IV.
—
On the Currency of Oliver's Coins.
Having completed the particular description of all the gold and silver
eoins hearing Oliver Cromwell's portrait, we now purpose to consider the-
question whether his coins of 1656 and 1658 ever passed as current money
in this country or not.
It has already been shown that the only contemporary pieces of
Oliver's time, engraved by Simon and coined by Blondeau, were the gold,
broad of 1656 (and heavy pattern broad weighing 348£ grains), the half-
broad of 1656 (with the "&&" in the obverse legend), Simon's crown in
silver, dated 1658, his half-crowns of 1656 and 1658, and his shilling and
six-pence of 1658, all with the " &c." on the obverse. Therefore, in en-
quiring into the question of their currency, we must only consider these
particular coins, and not the pieces which were probably made by Tanner,,
and which (except the crown) are usually without the " &c." on the obverse.
Martin Folkes, in his Table of English Gold Coins, 1736, page 8, says:-
" I apprehend, however, these Coins were never throughly (sic) published
as the Money of England, because I find that of the Commonwealth carried
on quite to the Eestoration." In the same author's Table of English Silver
Coins it is stated that: "In the year 1656 Oliver Cromwell ad-
ventured to coin money with his own head and style. But whether the-
moneys of this sort were, either now or afterwards, ever published as true
lawful, and current moneys of England., I have not been able to learn
It is even probable that the pieces coined were rather looked upon as-
proofs, and given away as medals or counters among his friends, than.
publickly dispersed as common money throughout the kingdom." Pages
98, 99, 100, of the Society of Antiquaries's edition, 1763.
Thomas SnelliDg also inclined to the idea of Oliver's coins bein<*
pattern pieces i "The fine pieces of Oliver Cromwell should now follow,,
but we have already given them among the current coin • however wethink there is a much greater probability of their being rather pattern
pieces, than otherwise, and to be classed among the most curious of them •
and some of the finest specimens of the superior genius both of Simon and
ۤi Cuttings nf 1658. 151
Blondeau, in their particular branches, although we find no mention made
of the latter, as being concerned therein."—Page 51, View of Pattern
Pieces, 1769.
The Eev. E. Ending, in his Annals of the Coinage, gives several argu-
ments on both sides of the question. It is well known that all of Oliver's
coins are scarce, and it has been said that this is because they were pattern
pieces. Euding, however, quotes Folkes's opinion that the comparatively
small quantity originally made was the cause of their rarity. Folkes says
—" Although I have never met with any account of the quantity that was
coined of the Protector's money, I apprehend the same not to have been
very considerable : first, because in a manner all I have ever seen of it has
been tolerably preserved, from whence it appears to have been hoarded up
and laid by, without ever running backwards and forwards in payments -,
which would hardly have been the case had there ever been a great
quantity of it."—Page 101, Table of English Silver Coins, 1763.
Although there are many rubbed specimens, it is quite true that the
greater number of the existing examples of Oliver's' coins are very well
preserved, but this may be explained by several circumstances. As only
a comparatively small quantity was coined, this money would not circulate
very freely, and as- Oliver died a few months after the 1658 coins were
made, they would of course be hoarded as memorials of him and as curio-
sities, as well as for their beauty and finish, in which they far excelled all
previous English coins. Samuel Pepys tells us that even so early as 16 C^
Cromwell's pieces were prized and bought up by connoisseurs :" The
erownes of Cromwell are now sold, it seems, for 25s. and 30s. a-pieee."
—
Diary, 9th March, 1662-3.
As we have just remarked, many of Oliver's coins are met with in a
rubbed and worn condition, looking as if they had been in circulation.
Pinkerton and Euding say that they have seen several of Cromwell's
broads and shillings in a much worn: state j* and some contemporary
forgeries of the shilling are existing (see p. 149 above), which would cer-
tainly lead one to believe that the genuine shillings must have been com-
monly current. The Author has himself met with several rubbed speci-
* See John Pinkerton's'^ssa^ on Medals, 3rd edit., 1808, vol. ii., p. 173 ; and Rev. 11.
Euding's Annals of the Coinage, 3rd edit., vol. i., p. 419.
152 #ii mi i! ran in Crnramjllinnc.
mens of the 1656 broad, the 1656 half-crown, and Simon's 1658 crown,
half-crown, shilling, and six-pence, which all look as if they had been in
circulation. The British Museum half-crown of 1656 is rather rubbed,
and the silver six-pence in the same cabinet is very much worn. Mr. "W.
E. Davies had a similar six-pence, also considerably worn, and the six-
pence in the Thomas collection was much rubbed. Worn specimens of
the 1658 crown, half-crown, and shilling, may be frequently met with.
The occurrence of so many worn coins of Oliver is a strong circum-
stance in favour of the theory that they were at one time current money.
Another fact in its favour is the quantity made : two thousand pounds'
worth of bullion was ordered by the Council to be coined (see p. 92
above), and most probably was so made into the money with Oliver's head.
There is not the least doubt that this coinage was intended to be a national
one, to circulate all over the kingdom, because the records quoted above
prove that it was contemplated to coin as much as £10,000 weekly (see
p. 125). It is also most unlikely that the several hundreds of Oliver's
coins which still exist should have been made merely as pattern pieces;
for unless the greater number were paid away as current money, the loss
to the government would have been very heavy. For particulars of the
large sums voted to Blondeau in 1656, 1657, and 1658, for mairing the
milled coins of the Protector, see the sections on the " Historical Docu-
ments " in our accounts of the 1656 and 1658 coinages, above.
There are two facts that have been adduced as evidence for the theory
that Oliver's coins were never current. The first is that the Trial of the
Pix, on the 3rd December, 1657, was of the Commonwealth's coins only
(of the type described on pp. 29, 30, above), none of the pieces with
Oliver's head being mentioned. The second argument is that these coins
of Oliver are not named in Charles II.'s proclamation of the 7th September,
1661, which forbade the currency of the coins of the Commonwealth's
type*
The first objection may be easily disposed of. The reason why the
milled coins with Oliver's head were not included in the Trial of the Pix
in- 1657, was because they were made by Blondeau in a separate and in-
dependent mint at Drury House. The rules and regulations of the Mint
* See Rev. B,. Ending's Annals of the Coinage, 3rd edit., voL i., p. 420, and 31. Folkes's
Table of EnglUh Silver Coins, 1763, pp. 99, 100.
€fyt i'Uinap nf 1658. 153
in the Tower of London, which require all the money there made to be
periodically examined by a Trial of the Pix, had no power over Blondeau,
who was a private engineer, totally unconnected with the Mint. He re-
ceived his instructions directly from the Protector and the Council of
State, and rendered account to them. His operations were conducted
secretly in a different part of London, by his own workmen, and quite in-
dependently of the officers of the Tower Mint, and their regulations. All
this is proved by the contemporary records which we have discovered and
printed above.
Euding, in noticing Charles II.'s proclamation for the calling in of
the Commonwealth's money, 7th September, 1601, says— "It is remark-
able that the coins of Cromwell are not described in this proclamation, an
omission which leads to the conclusion that they were never in circula-
tion."* However, he himself supplies an explanation for this omission,
furnished him by Sir Henry Ellis—
" It seems to have been forgotten that
the circulation of the Protector's money with his effigies was but of short
duration. The universal return of loyalty at the Eestoration rendered the
currency 'of Cromwell's coin so unpopular, that it was unnecessary for any
proclamation against them to be issued."t In the two years which elapsed
between their issue and the Eestoration, these pieces must have almost
gone out of use, especially as comparatively a small quantity was made,
and most of them were put away and hoarded for their beauty and curio-
sity. It would seem quite unnecessary to prohibit in a proclamation the
currency of coins that were scarcely ever seen in circulation.
On the whole, we see no reason to doubt that the following pieces
were in circulation for a short time, especially as we have seen worn speci-
mens of each one, except the half-broad
—
The gold twenty-shilling piece or broad, 1656, weighing 140^ grains,
see plate iii., no. 1,
The ten-shilling piece or half-broad of 1656, with the " &c." in the
obverse legend, and milled edge, plate iii., no. 3,
The silver half-crown of 1656, plate iii., no. 4,
The crown of 1658, by Simon, plate iii., no. 6,
* Kev. K. Ending's Annah of the Coinage, 3rd edit., vol. ii., p. 5, note 3.
t Idem, vol. i., p. 419, note.
154 fjuniismctii Crnramtllianit.
The half-crown of 1658, plate iii, no. 7,
The shilling, plate iii., no. 8,
The six-pence, plate iv, no. 1.
THE PATTEKX FAETH1XGS < )F UmS.
On pages 12, 13, and 52 to 58 of this work, we have already given
several particulars of pattern farthings of Cromwell's period. There
remain, however, a few others to be described, all bearing Oliver's head,
and probably made in the year 1658. The circumstances which caused
certain persons to strike patterns for farthings about this time, are detailed
on page 52 above. No regular copper coinage was issued by the govern-
ment during the Protectorate, nor indeed until 1672, but various patterns
were made and offered to the authorities for approval.
There are five varieties of the farthings with Oliver's portrait, all
evidently the work of the same engraver, and all probably coined in 1658.
Type I. has already been fully described under the year 1651 ; see
plate i, no. 5, and pages 12, 13, above. We have there given the reasons
why this farthing cannot possibly have been made in 1651, and why it
must probably have been struck in 1658.
Type II. is very similar to Type I. It bears Obverse, a badly-executed
bust of Oliver in profile to the left, laureate, and with drapery round the
neck. An inner circle, of a cable pattern, nearly surrounds the bust.
Legend—OLIVAE PEO • EXG • SC • IEL. Eeverse, garnished and
crowned shield of arms, like that on Type I., and inner circle as on the
obverse. Legend— CHAEITIE AND CHANGE. There are small
lozenges between the words of both legends. Copper ; diameter -85 of an
inch. Edge plain. See plate iv., no. 6.
It is engraved in—the Earl of Pembroke's plates, 1746, part iv.,
tab. 20 ; G. Yertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753, plate xxvi, no. 8
;
T. Snelling's View of the Copper Coin and Coinage of England, 1766, plate 6,
no. 10 (but with IEE for IEL on the obverse, and all the lozenges omitted
€Jje faihtn /nrtjiiitgs nf 1658. 155
in the legends) ; Folkes's and Ruding's plates of Silver Coins, plate xxxii.,
no. 9.
Although rare, the farthing of this second type is the most frequently
met with of all Oliver's pattern farthings. Copper specimens are preserved
in the British Museum, the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, and in several
private collections. When in very fine preservation it has sold for £10,
Mr. E. Hawkins's sale, 1868, lot 34.
Type III. Obverse, nearly similar to Type II., but from a different die'.
The inner circle entirely surrounds the bust, and the letters of the legend
are wider apart. There is also a mullet, or five-pointed star, at the com-
mencement of the legend. Eeverse, exactly similar to Type II. Copper
;
diameter '85 inch. Edge plain. See plate iv., no. 7.
This type has never before been published, and we have only heard
of three or four specimens. Our illustration is taken from a very fine
example in Mr. William Brice's collection, which was formerly in the
Thomas and Bergne cabinets. Mr. S. Addington also has one, but struck
in silver, perhaps the only pattern farthing of Oliver in that metal. Aslightly rubbed specimen, in copper, is in the Museum of the Boyal Mint,
London. The British Museum, however, does not possess an example of
this Type III.
Type IV. Obverse, exactly similar to, and from the same die as the
obverse of Type II. Beverse, three pillars tied together, typifying the
three countries of England, Scotland, and Ireland. On the tops of the
pillars are placed the emblems of each nation : a cross (for England) being
on the left hand pillar, a thistle (for Scotland) on the right hand one, and
a harp (for Ireland) on the central pillar. The initial of the maker " • B •"
is below the central pillar. There is also an inner circle of a cable pattern.
Legend—THVS VNITED INVINCIBLE, with small lozenges after the
two first words, and a mullet after the last. Copper; diameter '85 inch.
Edge plain. See plate iv., no. 8.
It is engraved in—T. Snelling's View of the Copper Coin and Coinage
of England, 1766, plate 6, no. 8 (but the small B and the lozenges are
omitted on the reverse) ; Folkess and Ruding's plates of Silver Coins, plate
xxxii., no. 11 (the small B also omitted).
This Type IV. is also very scarce, being somewhat rarer than Type II.
156 Jf nmisranf a (Grnmmillioii.
Specimens have realized £8 . 12s., Col. Dun-ant's sale, 1847, and £10, Mr.
E. Hawkins's sale, 1868.
Among the many pattern farthings of this period there are two (sup-
posed to have been made during the Commonwealth, but before Oliver was
Protector), which have their obverses similar to the reverse of this Type
IV. of Oliver. They are evidently the work of the same man, whose initial
" E " is under the central pillar. The first Commonwealth farthing has
Obverse, three pillars, legend, etc., exactly similar to the reverse of Oliver's
farthing of Type IV. Eeverse, a three-masted ship sailing to the left,
within an inner circle of a corded or cable pattern. Legend—AND GODDIEECT OVE COESE, with lozenges after the three first words, and
mint-mark a mullet after COESE. Copper ; diameter '9 inch, and similar
to no. 7, plate 6, of Snelling's View of the Copper Coin. The second Com-
monwealth farthing only differs from the first in not having the small * E "
under the pillars on the obverse, and in reading COVES instead of
COESE. It is similar to no. 9, plate xxvi., of G. Vertue's Works of
Thomas Simon.
Type V. Obverse, exactly similar to the obverse of Type II. Eeverse,
a three-masted ship sailing to the left, with a flag on the stern and one on
each mast. An inner circle of a cable pattern is around the design.
Legend—AND GOD DIEECT OVE COESE, with small lozenges be-
tween the words. A mullet at the commencement of the legend. Diameter,
including border, • 9 inch. See plate iv., no. 9.
The specimen here illustrated, and the only one which we have seen,
is in the British Museum. It is made of copper gilt, but has a white
metal edge of a chain pattern. This farthing is also engraved in Folkes's
and Ruding's plates of Silver Coins, plate xxxii., no. 12 ; but the engra-
ving reads COVES instead of COESE, and the chain border is not repre-
sented.
The reverse of this farthing, Type V., is similar to that of a Common-wealth pattern just mentioned, and which is engraved in Snelling's View of
the Copper Coin, plate vi, no. 7.
All the five types of Oliver's pattern farthings are clearly the work of
the same engraver, but a mere glance at the badly-drawn portraits and the
€{]? jpntttrn /arising* nf 1658. 157
coarse execution of the details will convince any one that the artist was
not Thomas Simon.
However, on the reverse of Type IV., as well as on the obverse of a
specimen of Type I. * is found a small letter E, which all numismatists
consider to be the initial of the engraver or maker of these farthings. This
affords one some clue, and Mr. Burn and others have supposed it to be the
mark of Thomas Bawlins, the royalist die-sinker, who was engraver to
Charles I.'s mint at Oxford during the Civil Wars. But besides the impro-
bability of a royalist making patterns for the Brotector's coins, Mr. Burn
himself shows that Bawlins was scarcely in a position to be able to make
the pattern farthings of Oliver at the time when they actually were made,
for a letter written by Bawlins on the 27th February, 1657-8, proves that
he was then in extreme distress, and imprisoned in a low prison in London
called the "Hole in St. Martin's."f
From a very careful comparison of Oliver's farthings with all the
other patterns' of the Commonwealth period, the Author has come to the
conclusion that the Brotector's five pattern farthings were really made by
David Bamage, one of the Moneyers of the Mint in the Tower of London,
whose name the initial B will equally well suit. On page 68 above, we
have mentioned a pattern farthing which is undoubtedly the work of
Bamage, as can be proved by the documentary and other evidence given
on pages 65—68.
Now the execution of this farthing, and the style of the lettering upon
it, are identical with those of Oliver's pattern farthings ; and, from the
striking similarity of workmanship, we have not the slightest doubt that
the five patterns with Oliver's bead, as well as several other pattern far-
things of the Commonwealth and Charles II. were made by Bamage.
Those engraved in Snelling's View of the Copper Coin, plate 6, nos. 3, 6,
7, 8, 9, and 10, are all his work. Our belief that Bamage, who was a
regular workman of the Mint, was also a well-known maker of farthings at
this period is further confirmed by a passage we have discovered in a con-
temporary tract
—
"And by his [Violet's] own Confession (before several! Witnesses)
* According to Mr. J. H. Burn, Catalogue of the Beaufoy Cabinet of Tokens, 2nd edit.,
1855, p. lvi., note,
t Idem, p. 137.
158 jB urn ism a tit (Crnmrnillinnn.
the chief Abettor and Assistor of him with money at present or lately,
to carry on these his mischievous designs is, one Rammage Farthing-maker
in the Tower, whose aime in all this business is, To suppress all Tools for
making Farthings but his own; the said Rammage having proffered a large
weekly Sum to be paid to one party, if all the Presses for making Farthings
may be but taken away about London but only his, that so he may have
the sole Trade in his hands."
—
Page 6 of The Great Trappaner of England
Discovered, being a true Narrative of many dangerous and abominable practises
of one Thomas Violet, Goldsmith, to Trappan the Jewes, etc. London, printed
1660, small quarto.
The above information appears almost sufficient to justify our identi-
fication of Eamage with the " E " who made the pattern farthings of
Oliver Cromwell*
The following entry in the Council Book doubtless refers to some pro-
posals for making farthings, but, besides the particulars given on pages
52—54 above, we can find no other notice of the matter among the State
Papers of Oliver's Protectorate
—
Thursday, 13th May, 1658.—" Upon reading the humble peticon of
Sr Thomas Vyner and Edward Backwell, Goldsmiths, for the makeing of
small money, &c. Ordered, That the same be referred to ye Lord Syden-
ham, Lord Mountagu, Lord Bichard Cromwell, Lord Jones, Earle of Mul-
grave, Lord Disbrow, Mr Secretary, or any two of them to consider thereof,
and report their opinion therein to j* Councell"
—
Page 616, Entry Book,
No. 106, of the Protector Oliver's Council of State.
The Eeport thus ordered cannot now be found.
THE DUTCH SATIRICAL MEDALS.
Most collectors of medals know how the Dutch, in the sixteenth,
seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries, produced large numbers of medals
* There is a curious notice of Ramage's family in Record Book No. IV. in the Mint.
It seems that he died in 1662, and on the 5th November in that year a warrant was issued
by Charles II., ordering the removal from the Mint buildings of " the widow and children
of David Ramage, who, as Wee are informed, have obstructed Our Service and been very
obstinate."
€\)i Bitrj) latiriral SSbiuls. 159
and jettons commemorating almost every historical event that happened
during this period, not only in their own country, but also in the dominions
of their neighbours. Large volumes have been filled with illustrations
and descriptions of the numerous productions of the Dutch medallists,
among which are—Gr. Van Loon's Medallic History of the Low Countries,
published in Dutch, four volumes folio, 1723—31, and in French, five
volumes folio, 1732—36; M. Bizot's Histoire Metallique de la Rtpublique
de Hollande, three volumes octavo, 1688 ; and Le Clerc's Histoire des Pro-
vinces-Vnies des Pays Bas, two volumes folio, 1723.
We accordingly find that the medallists of Holland produced manymedals relating to English history ; but only those of Cromwell's period
claim notice in these pages. Five of them, commemorating the peace of
"Westminster, made between the Protector Oliver and the States General of
the United Provinces on the 5th April, 1654, are fully described on pages
47—51, above. These medals are certainly complimentary, but we now
have to describe some others which are evidently intended to satirize
the Protector. The Dutch had indeed some reason to dislike Cromwell,
for they had suffered most severe defeats from his navy, and had only
obtained peace on hard terms, imperiously dictated to them by Cromwell,
and in which the most advantages were on his side.
In two of the following medals, Oliver Cromwell is satirically com-
pared to Masaniello, the fisher-king of Naples. Tommaso Aniello, called
by corruption Masaniello, a young fisherman, and a native of Amalphi,
lived at Naples towards the middle of the seventeenth century, under the
government of the Duke d'Arcos, viceroy of Philip IV. of Spain. In 1647,
being then about twenty-five years of age, and very popular among the
market-people, he led the mob in their insurrection against the oppressive
taxes imposed by the Spanish governor. The revolt was, for the time,
completely successful, and Masaniello was ruler of Naples from the 7th to
the 16th July, when he was murdered.*
This comparison of Masaniello to Cromwell on the medals was ob-
viously intended to disparage Cromwell's own birth and early circum-
stances, as well as to cast discredit upon his position as Protector, and the
means by which he became the chief of the nation. It is, however, almost
unnecessary to point out how different were the real events of Oliver's life.
* Charles Knight's National Cyclopcedia, London, 1847, vol. i., cols. 743—5.
160 Sfnraisiiifltii €ttmmt\[iana.
As he himself said in his speech to his first Parliament on the 12th Sep-
tember, 1654,—" I was by birth a gentleman, living neither in any con-
siderable height, nor yet in obscurity."* Milton also says of him—" Oliver
Cromwell was born of a noble and illustrious house ;" and " being now
arrived at a mature and ripe age (all which time he spent as a private
person) noted for nothing so much as the culture of purer religion, and an
integrity of life, he was grown rich at home."^
There are two medals bearing the portrait of Cromwell on one side,
and that of Masaniello on the other. The first medal, we believe, is con-
temporary; but the second one must have been made many years after
Oliver's death, and was probably suggested by the older medal.
Medal Xo. I.
Obverse, a large bust of Oliver Cromwell, three-quarter face to the
right, bare-headed, and in armour. Two soldiers, in Eoman costume, stand
at the sides of the bust, and hold a laurel wreath over Oliver's head.
Below all is a tablet, in an ornamental border, bearing the name and titles
of the Protector in Dutch—OLIYAE CEOMWEL PEOTECTOE V .
EXG-EL'. SCHOTL'. YBLAX. 1658. (Oliver Cromwell Protector of
England, Scotland, and Ireland, 1658).
Eeverse, bust of Masaniello, three-quarter face to the right, bare-
headed, and in his fisherman's dress. Two other fishermen, standing at
the sides, hold a crown over his head.. Below the bust is also a tablet,
bearing the inscription—MAS' AXTELLO YISSCHEE EX COXIXCK V.
XAPELS. 1647. (Masaniello, Fisherman and Ejng of Xaples, 1647).
A circular medal, size 2 -8 inches in diameter. It occurs both in silver
and copper, but each specimen was first cast, and then finished by hand-
chasing. The silver ones were cast in two separate plates, and then joined
together at the edges, consequently they are hollow, thus saving a quantity
of metal. The design is in unusually high relief.
This medal is dated 1658, and was perhaps made a few months before
* Speech. III. of Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speeches, by T. Carlyle, popular edition,
London, 1871, vol. iv., p. 47.
t Milton's Defensio Secunda pro populo Anglkano, 1654, quoted in Rev. F. Peck's
Memoirs of Oliver Cromwell, London, 1740, p. 118.
€\i Sntrli Intiriigl Bhfrnls. 161
Oliver's death on the 3rd of September in that year. The name of the
artist is unknown.
The illustration, plate v., no. 1, is taken from a fine example in
silver in the Author's collection. The medal is rare, although not ex-
tremely so. Silver specimens are in the British Museum, the Eoyal
Library, Brussels, and in several private collections. The Boyal Cabinet,.
Stockholm, contains a specimen, cast in bronze ;, and another in lead is in
the cabinet of the University of Leyden. At auction sales it has sold
from £1.10s., Mr. Thomas Brown's sale, 1869, to £2 . 5s., Mr. W. T. B.
Ashley's sale, 1876.
It is engraved in The Medallic History of England, 1790, plate xxii.,,
no. 10.
Mr. Martin I. Preston,, of Nottingham, has a bronze medallion, which
is a more recent cast, made in England, from the obverse of one of these
medals. It is also tooled by hand, and on the label under Oliver's bust
the name " • CEOMWELL • P " is engraved, instead of his name and
titles in Dutch,
Medal No. II.
Obverse, profile1 bust of Oliver Cromwell,, to the left, laureate, and
with drapery over the shoulders. Legend—OLIVAE • D • G * E P ' ANO -
SCO • ET • HIB &c PEO. Eeverse, profile bust of Masaniello to the'
left, in a fisherman's cap and blouse. Legend—THOMAS • ANLELLO •
DE AMALPHI. There is a beaded border round both sides, of the medal.
It is a circular medal, size 1'8 inches in diameter. The illustration,
plate v., no. 2, is from a copper specimen in the Author's collection. It
is most often met with in this metal. Other copper ones are in several
private collections and in the following public ones—the British Museum,
the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, the National Cabinet of Erance, the Eoyal
Library, Brussels, the Imperial Hermitage, St. Petersburg, the Eoyal Cabinet,
Copenhagen. A pewter one is in the collection of the Bank of England.
The features of Cromwell are much exaggerated ; but it is a struck
medal, and of good workmanship. On the shoulder of Masaniello, in very
small letters, are the initials of the artist, " S V," for St. Urbain. This
was the elder medallist of that name, Ferdinand de St. Urbain, who lived
162 Jftnnisrantfl tfrntnitUino.
1654—1738 ;* so that the medal must have heen made many years after
Oliver's death. It is not common, hut usually sells at ahout ten shillings
only.
It is engraved in The Medallic History of England, 1790, plate xxii.,
no. 11.
Medal No. III.
In the year 1655, Don Alonzo de Cardenas, Spanish Ambassador, and
M. de Bordeaux, Ambassador Extraordinary from Prance, were each sent to
solicit the Protector's alliance. Lord Clarendon informs us that Cromwell
"brought the two crowns of Prance and Spain to sue for his alliance
(April, 1654) ;" and that France and Spain were " contending, by their am-
bassadors, which should render themselves most acceptable to him (July,
1654)."f The poet Dryden thus alludes to these circumstances
—
" Fame of the asserted sea, through Europe blown,
Made France and Spain ambitious of his love
;
Each knew that side must conquer he would own,
And for him fiercely, as for empire, strove. "X
The ambassadors were kept in suspense for a very long period, as is
shown by some passages in the letters of Secretary Thurloe to Mr. Pell
—
23rd June, 1654.—" We are in a treaty both with France and Spain."
6th April, 1655.—" The French ambassador is yet here, but no nearer
the conclusion of the treaty, than at this time twelvemonth."—See the
Eev. Dr. E. Vaughan's Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell, London, 1839,
vol. i, pp. 13 and 164.
Oliver, however, at length decided in favour of France, and a treaty
was concluded with that country on the 2nd November, 1655, and pub-
lished in London on the 28th of the same month.
The following medal was doubtless made in 1655 by some Dutch
engraver, in order to ridicule the eagerness with which the two ambassa-
dors were contending for Cromwell's favour. It is called by Van Loon a
* P. 262 of H. Bolzenthal's "Skizzen zur Kunstgeschicte der modernen Medaillen-
Arbeit," Berlin, 1840.
t History of the Sebellion, edit. 1839, vol. vii., pp. 83 and 91.
J Stanzas on the Death of Oliver Cromwell, no. 22.
«|fj Ittttji iatiiital j^fB^nljEf. 163
" detestable piece," and is so coarse both, in idea and in execution, tbat we
shall not do more than briefly describe it.
Obverse, profile bust of Oliver Cromwell, laureate, to the left, in
armour, and with a plain collar. The armour is studded with many large
rivets. Legend—OLIVAE • D G R P • AN"G SCO HIBERNI^E •
PROTECTOR Reverse, a figure of Britannia, seated, on the right ; Crom-
well kneeling in front of her, with his head in her lap. Full-length figures
of the ambassadors of France and Spain are standing in the background,
disputing which shall do him homage. Britannia has by her side a shield
emblazoned with St. George's cross. The French ambassador has his dress
covered with fleurs-de-lis, and the legend is supposed to be spoken by him
—RETIRE . TOY . L'HONNEVR . APPARTIE'T . AV . ROY . MON .
MAISTER . LOVIS . LE . GRAND. (Stand back, that honour belongs
to the King, my master, Louis the Great.) The three last words are in the
exergue. A circular medal, size 1/85 inches in diameter. It is the work
of but a mediocre artist, and presents a much exaggerated portrait of
Oliver, with coarse and bloated features.
This medal is very rare, only a few of the genuine originals being now
known to exist. One of silver gilt, and another in pewter, are in the
British Museum, but the silver gilt one is a cast. A silver one is also in
the collection of the Bank of England. Another silver specimen, but
cast, is in the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow. The Royal Library, Brussels,
contains a specimen in copper.
Horace Walpole had one in silver, from Lord Orford's collection. It
was lot 53, tenth day, in the Strawberry Hill sale, 1842. Mr. Thomas
Thomas also possessed a silver specimen, bought at M. Trattle's sale, 1832,
for £9 . 15s. At Thomas's sale in 1844, however, it only realised £5 . 5s.
In Captain J. Hamilton's fine collection of English medals, is another
silver specimen.
It is engraved in—G. Van Loon's Inleiding tot 3e Heedendaagsche
Penningkunde, 1717, tasel F, penn. 7 (reverse only) ; Van Loon's Beschry-
ving der Nederlandsche Historipenningen, 1723, vol. ii., p. 407 ; Van Loon's
Histoire Mitallique des Pays-Bas, 1732, vol. ii., p. 395 ; and in The Medallic
History of England, 1790, plate xxii., no. 12.
There is also a separate copper-plate print of this medal, enlarged to
164 jSurabniitta (GrnmraiUiflitB.
4f inches in diameter. Over the medal itself is an inscribed scroll, reading
" Tempora mutantur, et Eds mutamur in illis." Below is this title :" The
difference of Tiroes between those Times and these Times" with eight lines
of verse, an account of the publication of the medal, and " price 6d." There
is a second state of this print, with the ruled lines of the background
removed, "The Naked Truth " placed instead of the title, and the following
publication line—" Published according to Act of ParIt. the 23d day of June
1739./. i. c. by John Brett."*
The Author of the present work possesses an impression of this rare
print, in the second state, which appears to have been published in some
pamphlet or newspaper of the year 1739. An advertisement of it runs
thus
—
" This Day is publish'd (according to Act of Parliament), a curious
Copper-Plate Print of the Naked Truth, being a Eepresentation of the Glory
of Old England, and the Humility of France and Spain in the Days of
Oliver Cromwell; with a Poetical Explanation of the whole—in reference
to the present Times, from this Motto : Tempora mutantur, et Nos mutamur
m illis."
This political and satirical print was evidently issued by some of the
so-called " patriot party," who in 1738-9 were loudly demanding war with
Spain, in opposition to the peace policy of Sir Eobert Walpole and the
ministry. The engraving is obviously intended to contrast Walpole's
position with Cromwell's, by showing that France and Spain humbly
begged for the Protector's alliance, while England under Walpole was
despised and insulted by these two nations.
TH1 FUXEEAL MEDALS.
Oliver Cromwell, as is well known, died in 1658, on the third of Sep-
tember, a day which he had long considered to be his fortunate day, for on
it two of his greatest victories, Dunbar and Worcester, were gained in 1650
and 1651. He expired quietly in his bed, in the sixtieth year of his age,
* See the Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum ; Division I. Poli-
tical and Personal Satires. Vol. i., 1870, page 499.
€jjb /ttnnul J&tHU. 165
four years eight months and eighteen days after he had been declared
Protector by the Instrument of Government.
We learn from the newspapers of the period that his body was
embalmed on the 4th September, and, on the 20th of the same month, the
corpse was removed from Whitehall Palace, in a private manner, being
attended only by his own household servants, his Chamberlain, and a
guard. The body was taken to Somerset House, " where it rests for some
days more private, but afterwards will be exposed in state to publio
view."*
It is, however, most probable that he was buried quietly in West-
minster Abbey a few days afterwards, for only a waxen effigy was exhibited
to the people as lying in state at Somerset House, and this effigy only was
carried to the Abbey in the grand funeral procession on the 23rd November
following. There seems no doubt, therefore, that the actual corpse was
laid in the tomb long before.
A brief description of the pompous funeral procession and ceremony,
will not, we hope, be here considered out of place; as the small oval
funeral medal of Oliver was, no doubt, made by Simon for distribution on
this occasion.
As we have just hinted, an effigy of the late Protector was carved in
wood, and then covered with wax, which was modelled as an exact portrait
' by Thomas Simon, the medallic artist. This effigy, royally dressed in
purple velvet and ermine, was placed in sumptuously prepared rooms in
Somerset House, where it was publicly shown, lying in state, during
October and November, 1658. A detailed account of the elaborate arrange-
ments, with an engraving, will be found in M. Stace's Cromwelliana, p. 179,
quoted from the Mercurius Politicus of the 14th to the 21st October, 1658.
On Tuesday, the 23rd November, the day appointed for his solemn
funeral, this e&Lgy of the Protector, vested in royal robes, a sceptre in one
hand, a globe in the other, a sword by his side, and a crown on his head,
was removed from the room where it had been lying in state. It was
then placed on a hearse, in an open chariot or bier, covered with a pall of
black velvet. The chariot was drawn by six horses, also covered with
black velvet; the hearse being profusely adorned with escutcheons and
* Newspapers quoted in M. Stace's Cromvielliana, folio, Westminster, 1810, pages
176—178.
166 # urn is mat a (Crnmnnllioir.
plumes. The procession passed along the Strand to "Westminster, the
streets being railed in and lined with soldiers. On each side of the
funeral chariot were borne six bannerolls or pennons, which were em-
blazoned with the arms of Cromwell and of the families to which he was
allied. The several pieces of his highness's armour were carried by eight
officers of the army, attended by heralds. Next followed Garter King-of-
Arms, with a gentleman on each side of him. Then came the Chief
Mourner (doubtless the new Protector, Eichard Cromwell) attended by
various noble persons, as his supporters. The procession was very lengthy,
and went along in several divisions, which were distinguished l3j drums,
trumpets, banners, and led horses. Among the numerous personages who
followed in this funeral may be mentioned—the Foreign Ambassadors ; the
members of the Protector's House of Lords; the members of his Privy
Council ; the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of London ; the Lords Commis-
sioners of the Great Seal ; the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury ; the
Commissioners of the Army, of the Navy, and of the Excise ; the Com-
missioners for the Approbation of Preachers; the Judges of the Upper
Bench and Common Bench ; the Barons of the Exchequer ; the Judges of
the Admiralty ; the Judges of Wales ; His Highness's Counsel at Law
;
the Masters in Chancery; the Masters of Bequests; the officers in commandof the Fleet and of the Army ; the head officers of the Army ; the late
Protector's physicians, and domestic servants ; his bargemen and water-
men ; the officers, clerks, and messengers of the Privy Council, and of the
Houses of Parliament; the secretaries, clerks, and other officers of the
Army, Admiralty, Treasury, Navy, Exchequer, and other public offices;
the " poor knights " of Windsor ; the poor men of Westminster ; with the
servants of the great men who attended the funeral, etc. Lastly, led by
the Master of the Horse, came the horse of honour, in rich embroidered
trappings of crimson velvet, and adorned with white, red, and yellow plumes.
The rear of the procession was brought up by the Protector's guard of
halberdiers, the warders of the Tower, and a troop of horse-soldiers. Manythousands of spectators lined the way, or viewed the pageant from windows,
stages, and scaffolds.
On arriving at the west gate of Westminster Abbey, the hearse, with
the effigy thereon, was taken off the chariot, and carried into the Abbeyby ten gentlemen, a rich canopy of state being held over it by six other
€{jb fuut&l 3Mab. 167
gentlemen. In this stately manner the effigy was brought up to the east
end of the Abbey, and there placed in a magnificent structure which had
been purposely erected to receive it. The real corpse of Oliver, however,
had been previously interred in a vault under Henry VII. 's Chapel*
Nevertheless, he was not allowed to rest here, for about two years
afterwards, on the 26th January, 1661, pursuant to an order of the House
of Commons, Oliver's body was barbarously exhumed from the vaidt in
Henry VII.'s Chapel, and on the 30th January, the twelfth anniversary of
King Charles's execution, it was (together with the bodies of Ireton and
Bradshaw) suspended on the gibbet at Tyburn until sunset, when it was
beheaded, and the body thrown into a pit beneath the gallows. The head
was fixed on a spike over Westminster Hall, where it remained until
blown down in James II.'s reign. It is said to have been picked up by a
sentry ; and, after passing through several hands, this embalmed head is
now, we believe, in the possession of Mr. Horace "Wilkinson, Sevenoaks,
Kent.
Thomas Simon, who modelled the face of the above-mentioned effigy,
is stated to have been one of the persons who walked in the funeral pro-
cession, on the 23rd November, 1658;-f-
and he also made a very beautiful
medal,- commemorative of this occasion, which was, as Vertue and others
consider, distributed at the funeral to the principal friends of the deceased-
This medal is usually met with in gold, and is a beautiful and elegant
little work, executed with minute care and exactness. It is oval in shape,
and has a loop for suspension.
It bears—Obverse, profile bust of Oliver Cromwell to the left, laureate,
and in armour. Under the shoulder is the artist's name " T • SIMON," in
small letters. Legend—OLIVAE • D • Gr • EP • ANG SCO • HIB &c
PEOTECTOE. Eeverse, a pastoral scene, exhibiting a large olive tree, in
full bloom, with the stump of a still larger one, which has apparently been
just cut down, by its side. To the right and left of the landscape are two
* See S. Carrington's "History of the Life and Death of his most serene Highness
Oliver, Late Lord Protector," 8vo., London, 1659 ; and an account, from a contemporary
manuscript of the Rev. J. Prestwich, printed in Sir J. Prestwich's "Eespublica," 4to.,
London, 1787, pages 175—178.
+ Horace Walpole's Anecdotes of Painting : see his Works, edit. 1798, 4to., vol. hi.
,
p. 280.
168 Mnmitmala (CrnmiiUianit.
shepherds, each accompanied by his flock. There are also two very small
trees in the background, one behind each shepherd. Above, is the legend
—
NON DEFITIENT OLIVA • SEP 3 • 1658. A small oval medal,
size-85 of an inch by "75 of an inch. See plate v., no. 3.
The bust of Oliver on the obverse of this medal is very beautifully
and carefully executed. It resembles the portrait, also by Simon, on the
Inauguration Medal (plate i., no. 6), although Cromwell looks older and
more careworn on the funeral medal.
The design of the reverse requires some explanation, which the motto
"NON DEFITIENT OLIVA" partially supplies. The date of Oliver's
death follows this motto, which obviously signifies that " the olives (or
Olivers) will not be wanting," to continue the government of the nation.
But there is a curious mistake on the medal Not only ought the word"defitient " to be more correctly spelled "
deficient" but the last word
clearly ought to be " olives," not " oliva," to make correct Latin. The device
is also a play on Cromwell's name Oliver, representing him under the
allegory of an olive tree. The motto tells us that, although the great
Oliver, the first Protector, is dead, other Olivers (or other Cromwells, in
the persons of his sons) will not be wanting as the future Protectors of the
Commonwealth. The stump of the cut down olive tree evidently repre-
sents the deceased Protector, whose life has been cut short by death, while
the flourishing olive tree growing near it seems to refer to the new Pro-
tector, Eichard Cromwell ; who immediately and quietly succeeded to all
his father's powers, although he did not keep them long. The shepherds
and sheep are the people of the nation, who are represented as peaceably
following their proper pursuits under the shadow of the olive tree, or
government of the Protector.
The original medals of this type are very rare. They were struck in
gold, with a loop for suspension, and perhaps were worn by the chief per-
sonages at the grand funeral on the 23rd November, 1658. In the British
Museum is a fine specimen in gold, with loop and ring ; and another
similar one, also in gold, with loop, is in the Bank of England's collection.
A third is in the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow. A fourth original example
in gold, also with loop, was sold for £3 . 5s. as lot 30 of the sale of British
Museum Duplicates, on the 10th February, 1876. It was formerly in the
late Mr. E. Hawkins's collection.
%\t /annul %i\&U> 169
One of these gold medals was in S. Tyssen's sale, 1802, lot 2868, and
the same specimen sold at Sir M. M. Sykes's sale for £2 . 16s., but again
at A. Edmonds's sale, 1834, for £16. In the Thomas Thomas sale, 1844,
were two specimens : lot 465, which sold for £5 . 2s . 6d., and lot 563, which
realized the same price.
George Vertue, in his description of the Works of Thomas Simon, London,
1753, page 15, states that, in the earlier part of the last century, one of these
oval gold medals was in the collection of the Earl of Oxford, and another in
that of Sir Hans Sloane.
There are a few specimens of this medal in other metals than gold,
which are probably trial proofs, struck off by the engraver Simon himself.
In the British Museum is one in copper, and one in lead. Another im-
pression in lead is also in the cabinet of the University of Leyden. Apewter one was in lot 34 of a sale at Messrs. Sotheby and Wilkinson's, 25th
March, 1874.
It is almost needless to caution the reader that all the original and
genuine specimens, made by Simon, are struck from steel dies, and not cast.
Inferior copies of this medal, cast in silver, sometimes occur for sale. Wehave never met with a silver one struck from the original dies.
This medal is engraved in—G-. Van Loon's Beschryving der Nederlandsrhe
Historipenningen, 1723, vol. ii, page 435, no. 2; Van Loon's Histoire Metallique
des Pays-Bas, 1732, vol. ii., page 420, no. 2 ; G. Vertue's Works of Thomas
Simon, 1753, plate xii. (but reads PEOTECTO, instead of PEOTECTOE, on
the obverse) ; and The Medallic History of England, 1790, plate xxii. no. 9.
Simon may perhaps have derived a hint for the punning device of the
reverse from the elegiacal verses on the Protector's death, issued by T.
Davies about the 5th October, 1658. The medal may not have been
required until the funeral on the 23rd November, and this would leave
Simon more than six weeks for his work. The design of the olive tree is
obviously in allusion to Oliver's own name, and some bines comparing
Cromwell to an olive tree occur in certain elegiacal verses on his death by
Thomas Davies, entitled The Tenth Worthy, printed on a single folio sheet,
which is dated in manuscript "5th October 1658," by Thomason, the col-
lector of the King's Pamphlets in the British Museum :
—
170 jCnmismflin Ctnmmr IHirir a
.
" When War was at the height of tears and blood,
The Lord sent Oliver the Great, and Good,
Who prov'd our Olive-branch, and Peace he got.
* * * *
" He did provide
That we should not be left without a Guide ;
But after him find setled here we see
The primest branch of that fair Olive-tree."
Also, in Andrew Marvell's verses on the First Anniversary of the Govern-
ment under the Lord Protector, is a similar allusion
—
" Thou with the same strength, and a heart so plain,
Didst like thine olive still refuse to reign."
Further, we observe that, during Eichard's Protectorate, Mr. Hewley,
speaking in Parliament, said—
" Our olive is an emblem of peace." See
Burtons Cromwellian Diary from 1656 to 1659, 8vo, London 1828, vol. iv.
p. 15. The editor of the Diary, Mr. J. T. Eutt, remarks in a footnote
—
" Here, perhaps, may be a complimentary reference to the Protector Eichard,
as the son of Oliver." To our thinking, these contemporary allusions
evidently show that the Protector Oliver was frequently compared to an
olive tree by persons of his time.
Imitations of Simon's Fuxekal Medal.
There are two other and larger medals, with reverses very similar to
the small oval funeral medal just described, which are evidently imitations
of it. George Vertue considers that the first one was struck several years
after Cromwell's death, " to gratify his admirers," and that it was probably
done in Holland.
—
{Works of Thomas Simon, London, 1753, page 15.) Healso alludes to the large gold medallion (the subjoined Imitation No. II.),
but does not describe or engrave it, as it is not one of Simon's works.
Dutch Imitation No. /.—Obverse, profile bust of Oliver Cromwell to the
left, laureate, and with Eoman drapery round the neck. Legend—OLIVAE .
D.G.EP. ANG . SCO . HIB . PEO. Eeverse, a large olive tree, with
a shepherd feeding his flock under its shade. There may also be perceived
some small trees and a church steeple in the distance. Leo-end—NON .
DEFITIENT . OLIVA . SEP . 3 . 1658. A circular medal, size 1 15inches in diameter. See plate v. no. 4.
€\i /onnl 3Hiltnls. 171
The obverse of this medal is a close imitation of the obverse of Simon's
shilling of Oliver (see plate iii. no. 8), and the busts are very much alike.
The reverse is copied from the reverse of Simon's small oval funeral medal
(plate v. no. 3), but with some, differences. There is a similar large olive tree,
but there is no stump at its side. There is only one shepherd, and there
are fewer sheep, but in the back-ground is inserted a church steeple, which
is not on Simon's medal.
It is not known who was the engraver of this Dutch imitation. Some
specimens have their edges milled, contrary to the usual custom with regard
to medals. They generally occur in gold, and occasionally in silver, but
are neither rare nor valuable. A leaden specimen, but corroded, is in the
possession of Sir Walter C. Trevelyan, Bart.
This medal is engraved in
—
G. Van Loon's Beschryving der Nederlandsche
Historipenningen, 1723, vol. ii., page 435, no. 3 ; Van Loon's Histoire Metattique
des Pays-Bas, 1732, vol. ii., page 420, no. 3 ; G. Vertue's Works of Thomas
Simon, 1753, plate xii. ff. ; and The Medallic History of England, 1790, plate
xxii. no. 7.
Dutch Imitation No. II.—Obverse, profile bust of Oliver Cromwell,
laureate, to the left, in armour, with large plain collar. Legend—OLIVAE •
D • G R P • ANO • SCO HlBERMiE • PROTECTOR. Reverse, a lar^e
olive tree, with a shepherd feeding his flock under its shade. In the back-
ground are several trees, with a tower and a large circular building on the
left. Legend—NON DEFITIENT • OLIVA SEP 3 1658. A circular
medal, size 1 '9 inches in diameter. See plate v. no. 5.
The obverse of this piece is copied from that of the Dutch satirical
medal described above on page 163. Both medals may perhaps be by the
same artist, although this funeral medal is better executed than the
satirical one.
The reverse of this second imitation is also a copy, from Simon's small
oval medal (plate v., no. 3), or more probably from the Dutch Imitation
No. I. It differs from the last-mentioned medal only in size and in having
the tower and building, instead of the church steeple, in the background.
These two Dutch imitations both continue Simon's error of " OLIVA "
for " OLIV/E," on the reverse. The largest of the two is by a different
engraver from the smaller one. It must have been made some time
172 Snraiamntit (Cmmmtlltoii.
previous to the year 1691, as it is illustrated in the Abb^ Eaguenet's
Histoire d' Olivier Gromwel, 12mo, [Amsterdam] 1691, page 297.
Specimens of Imitation No. II. occur both in gold and silver, but the
gold ones are very rare. Mr. J. Kermack Ford, of Southsea, has one iu
pewter.
It is engraved in—F. Eaguenet's Histoire d' Olivier Cromwel, 1691,
p. 297; Gregorio Leti's Vita di Oliviero Cromvele, 1692, vol. ii. p. 522; G. Leti's
Vie d'Olivier Cromwel, 1694, vol. ii., p. 482; G. Van Loon's Beschryving der
Nederlandsche Historipenningen, 1723, vol. ii., p. 435, no. 1 ; Van Loon's
Histoire Metallique des Pays-Bas, 1732, vol. ii., p. 420, no. 1.
This second Dutch Imitation is also engraved in J. Evelyn's Discourse
of Medals, folio, London 1697, on page 119, but the engraver has erroneously
put " DEFITIET " instead of " DEFLTIENT." Evelyn himself is also under
some mistake in thinking that this medal was struck in England by the
direction of the Protector Eichard Cromwell ; for the piece is undoubtedly
a later Dutch imitation. Evelyn's remarks are as follows—" For so confident
was this Bold Man [Oliver] of establishing himself and posterity (having
now killed and taken possession), that his presumptuous son stampt another
medal, representing his father in arms and titles as above."
In G. Leti's Vie d' Olivier Cromwel, Amsterdam, 1694, vol. ii., p. 482,
the author makes the following ridiculous statement concerning this medal—
" Milord d'Anglesei [Lord Anglesey] m' a dit qu'un de ses amis avoit vu
cette me'daiUe en argent huit jours avant la mort de Cromwel."
CHAPTEE V.
MISCELLANEOUS MEDALS.
In the present chapter we shall describe some miscellaneous medals
and tokens, all bearing portraits of Oliver Cromwell, but all made since his
time, except one contemporary medal relating to the battle of Dunbar, which
was accidentally omitted in its proper place.
Dunbar Medal ISTo. IV.
This piece ought more properly to have been described on page 9 of this
work, immediately after the description of the other Dunbar Medals. It
was, however, then overlooked, from the circumstance that, on the only spe-
cimen now known, the word "DVNBAE " can scarcely be perceived at all.
This specimen, the only one we have seen, is in the cabinet of the
British Museum, but is a mere trial proof in lead. It was originally about
1 -1 inches square, but is now much broken and corroded. The design upon
it is oval in shape, size 1 inch by -
9 inch, and represents a three-quarter-face
bust of Oliver Cromwell to the right, bare-headed, and in armour. Above
is the legend—HITHEETO HATH THE LOED HELPED VS.* The
word DVNBAB was once to be read behind the head, but it is now nearly
all gone by decay. There is no design on the reverse.
The style of the bust very much resembles that on the Lord General
Medal (plate i. no. 4), except that there is no mantle over the armour. This
medal was probably made soon after the other Dunbar Medals, and before
the Lord General Medal, and it seems the work of Thomas Simon, although
George Vertue thought that it was not (Works of Thomas Simon, London,
1753, page 14).
* This was the saying of Samuel when he set up the stone Eben-ezer, in memory of the
victory over the Philistines near Mizpeh (I Samuel, chap. vii. verse 12.}
174 Hit mi if ma tit (CriimtttHliiitiit.
The reason why only a leaden proof now exists, is perhaps because the
steel die broke in the hardening process, and Simon did not care to engrave
a new die all over again. This proof impression, taken in soft lead, before
the die was hardened, is therefore the only example known to collectors.
It was obtained by the British Museum from the collection of the late Mr.
Edward Hawkins, who bought it at the sale of the Duke of Devonshire's
cabinet.
This medal is engraved in—G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753,
plate xii. D ; and in The Medallic History of England, 1790, plate xxii. no. 8,
apparently copied from Vertue's plate. Both illustrations omit the word
"DVNBAE" behind the head.
Imitation Inauguration Medal.
There is a well executed medal bearing Oliver's bust, although not
struck in his time, which must now be described. George Vertue, in his
Works of T. Simon, 1753, p. 14, gives the following account of its history.
He says that so much profit was made by the sale in England of the oval
impressions of the Lord General Medal (which were struck off from the old
broken die about the year 1723, see above, pp. 10, 11), that another medal
was imitated after it, with the bust exactly copied from the Lord General
Medal, and the letters " T. S." placed beneath, in order to make it pass for
an original medal by Simon. To supply a reverse to it, however, as the real
Lord General Medal is without one, the imitator copied the reverse of Simon's
Inauguration Medal (plate i. no. 6).
Vertue thinks that this forgery was made at Geneva, and it seems very
probable that it was engraved there, about the year 1725, by the celebrated
medallist of that city, Jean Dassier ; whose best known works are a series
of medals representing the English sovereigns, published in 1731.
The imitation medal now under consideration is struck from steel dies,
and is of good execution, not unlike Dassier's work. It bears—Obverse,three-quarter-face bust of Oliver Cromwell to the right, in armour, and
draped ; exactly copied from the Lord General Medal (plate i. no. 4), but
with the addition of the forged initials " T S.," for Thomas Simon, beneath
the bust. The legend is different, reading—OLIV • D • G • E • P • ANG •
SCO • ET • HIB • PEO. Eeverse, a lion sejant supporting the Protector's
shield of arms, with his motto above—PAX • QV^EEITVE • BELLO •: all
WAitillnitM %i\z\%. 175
exactly copied from the reverse of the Inauguration Medal, (plate i. no. 6).
A circular medal, size 1-3 inches in diameter. See plate v. no. 6.
Silver specimens of this imitation are now rare, and sell for good prices.
Copper ones are commoner, and not worth much.
The ohverse only of this medal is engraved in G. Vertue's Works of
Thomas Simon, 1753, plate xii. C ; and in The Medallic History of England,
1790, plate xxii. no. 5.
Dassier's Medal.
About the year 1731, Jean Dassier, a native and inhabitant of Geneva,
published a well executed series of medals of the sovereigns of England from
William the Conqueror to George II., dedicated to the latter monarch.
Dassier had previously distinguished himself by his medals of the Protestant
Eeformers, etc. ; and it is said that he engraved this series of English kings
with a view to obtaining a situation in the Eoyal Mint, London. Dassier
is stated to have come to England about 1740, with the same aim, but he
was not successful in his desire to obtain employment here, and he soon
returned to Switzerland. He died in 1763, at the age of 87 years*
Dassier's set of the monarchs of England contained thirty-three medals,
which were published by subscription at the price of six guineas. A medal
of Queen Caroline, the consort of George II., makes one of the number, and
it is thought that Cromwell was at first left out, although it was subsequently
found necessary to issue a fine medal with his portrait, " to perfect sets." fThe series therefore consists of thirty-four medals, including Cromwell's and
Queen Caroline's. Although many of the portraits of the earlier kings are
not to be depended upon, the series is still sought after by collectors. The
medal of Cromwell may sometimes be purchased separately, either in silver
or in copper. It bears
Obverse, bust of Oliver Cromwell in profile to the left, laureate, and in
armour, with drapery over the armour, in the Eoman style. Legend
—
OLIVAEIUS CEOMWELL. The artist's name is in small letters below
the bust—I • DASSIEE • F (Jean Dassier fecit).
Eeverse, a large square mausoleum or tomb, which bears an oval shield
* P. 257 of H. Bolzenthal's Shizzen zur Kunstgeschichte der modernen Medaillen-Arbeii,
Berlin, 1840.
+ Notes and Queries, 4th series, vol. ii. p. 163«
176 Jf it mi s mu t it Grnramilliann.
with Cromwell's arms in six quarters, surmounted by a helmet. Below, on
a tablet, is the inscription—ANGLIC • SCO ET • HIB • PROTECTOR.Around the tomb, on the pediment, are standing and sitting four winged
cherubs, or genii. One points to the inscription, another holds a mirror
and reclines on a skull, a third bears a laurel wreath aud fasces, and the
fourth has the lion's skin and club of Hercules, and holds in his hand the
three golden apples of the Hesperides, symbolising the three kingdoms over
which Cromwell ruled. In the exergue is the legend—NAT • 3 • APBIL1603, MOET • 3 • SEPT • 1658. A circular- medal, size 1 -5 inches in
diameter. It is a little smaller than the other medals of the series.
The portrait of Cromwell is not very successful, for, although well
engraved, it differs a good deal in expression from the busts on his medals
by Simon. On the reverse is a great blunder, in the date given as that of
Oliver's birth. He was not born on the 3rd April, 1603, but on the 25th
April, 1599*
This medal is engraved in
—
An Explanation of Dassier's Medals of the
Sovereigns of England, folio, London, 1797, plate v., no. 2 ; also in The
Medallic History of England, 1790, plate xxxiv. no. 6.
Octagonal Medal.
In the British Museum is a roughly executed medal of copper gilt,
octagonal in shape, and with a ring for suspension. It is cast, not struck, and
appears to have been made after Cromwell's time, perhaps in the last century.
The design is on one side only, and exhibits a profile bust of Oliver Cromwell
to the left, laureate, and with drapery round the neck. There is no legend.
The device is surrounded by an octagonal border of straight lines. Size,
without the loop, -95 inch by -
8 inch.
We have not heard of any other specimen than that in the British
Museum.
Kirk's Medal.
A small medal of Cromwell was also made by James Kirk, a well-
known medallist of medium ability, who executed a good many miscel-
laneous pieces about the middle of the last century. It bears
* See T. Carlyle's Letters and Speeches of 0. Cromwell, people's edition, 1871, vol. i. p. 17 ;
and the Rev. M. Noble's Memoirs of the Protectoral House of Cromwell, 3rd edit., 1787, vol. i.
pp. 91 and 351.
3KimlUimittH Mil&ls. 177
Obverse, bust of Oliver Cromwell in profile to the left, laureate, and in
armour. The words KIRK FEC (it) in small letters at the sides. Noother legend. Eeverse, the following inscription in three lines—OLIVARCROMWELL 1658. A circular medal, 1 inch in diameter.
This is one of a series of twelve small medals which were distributed
monthly, during one year (1773-4), to the purchasers of the Sentimental
Magazine (London, published by G. Kearsley, 8vo.) The Cromwell medalet
was presented with the magazine for October 1773, price sixpence for the
two.
In the Author's collection are two varieties, one struck in Copper, and
the other of copper plated with silver. They are common, and worth very
little.
The portrait is a fair one, more like Cromwell than that on Dassier's
medal.
Smith's Medal.
There is another modern medal bearing Cromwell's bust. It was struck
in Paris in 1846, and forms one of a series of medals of celebrated men of
all nations, published by Durand. The artist's name is given on the medal
as Smith.
Obverse, large bust of Oliver Cromwell, in profile to the left, in armour,
and with a large falling collar. He also wears a broad-brimmed, steeple-
crowned hat, with feathers in it. The name of the engraver smith f (ecii),
below the shoulder. At the sides—OLIVER CROMWELL. Reverse, the
following legend in ten lines—NATUS HUNTINGDON AN. M. D. XC.
IX. OBIIT LONDINI AN. M. DC. L. VIII.—series numismatica
UNIVERSALIS VIRORUM ILLUSTRIUM.— M. D. CCC. XLVI.— DURAND EDIDIT.
(Born at Huntingdon in the year 1599, died at London in the year 1658.-
—
Universal Numismatic Series of Celebrated Men, 1846, published by
Durand). A circular medal of copper, size 1 "7. inches in diameter.
Although it is a well-executed and a struck medal, the portrait on the
obverse is by no means a good likeness.
Copper Token.
A copper half-penny token, bearing a bad attempt at a portrait of
Crpnlwell was issued by one of the Welsh Copper Mining Companies, about
the end of the eighteenth century. It is thin, and circular, size 1 '05 inches
178 Jfttmistitfltii -(Cinratnilliaini.
in diameter, badly struck and executed, and bears—Obverse, a very rude
bust of Oliver Cromwell, in profile to the right, draped, and helmeted.
Legend— OLIVEE CBOMWELL. Eeverse, a large harp, crowned.
Legend—SOUTH WALES.
Leaden Token.
There also exists another very rude token, but made of lead. It is
uncertain when it was made, as the date " 1658 " upon it is merely copied
from the coins of Oliver. We should, however, think that the period was
about the commencement of the present century. From the inscription on
the reverse it appears to have been intended for a ticket of admission to
some place called " Cromwell Garden," where the charge was six-pence.
In the designs and legends this piece is a rough imitation of Oliver's
shilling of 1658 (see plate hi. no. 8). It is rather thick, and is circular,
size 1 '2 inches in diameter. Obverse, bust of Oliver Cromwell in profile
to the left, laureate, and draped (badly copied from the shilling). Legend
—
OLIVAE D G E P ANG SCO HIB &= PEO. Eeverse, crowned shield of
arms as on the shilling. Legend—PAX QV^EEITVE BELLO N° [blank].
Over the crown is the date " 1658," and below the shield is the price " 6d."
At the sides of the shield are the words " CEOML GABDEN."
CHAPTEE VI.
THE SEALS OF OLIVER BEFORE HE WAS PROTECTOR.
Private Seal No. I.—The earliest original letter of Oliver Cromwell now
extant is sealed with a very small seal, in red wax, bearing his crest
only. The seal is oval, size-5 by "4 inches, and bears the Cromwell crest
—out of a wreath, a demi-lion rampant, single-tailed, argent, holding in
his dexter gamb a gem-ring or. A crescent (the difference of a second
son or the second son's house) is placed over the lion's breast. The
whole device is surrounded by a beaded line. See illustration, Plate VI.
No. 1.
This seal, rather damaged, is on an original letter from Oliver Cromwell
to Mr. Storie, dated the 11th January 1635 (-6), which is preserved in the
album of Philibert Vernati and George Willingham, British Museum,
Additional Shane MSS. No. 2035, fo. 125. It is curious that, as far as
we know, this is the only impression of the Private Seal No. I. now in
existence.
The Bev.' Mark Noble, on page 11, vol. i., of his Memoirs of the
Protectoral House of Cromwell (third edition, 1787), relates an anecdote
about the crest of the Cromwells, to the effect that the more ancient way
of bearing it was with a javelin or spear in the demi-lion's gamb, but that,
in 1540, King Henry VIII. was so pleased with Sir Eichard Cromwell's
skill in a tournament that he presented a diamond ring to him, bidding him
ever afterwards bear such a one in the fore-gamb of the demi-lion in his
crest. This Sir Eichard Cromwell was great-grandfather of the Protector
Oliver. The latter, on his seals, appears to have used in his crest sometimes
a javelin, sometimes a ring, and sometimes a fleur-de-lis; see the illustrations
on plate vi.
Private Seal No. II.—This seal is oval, size, to the beaded edging, -7 by
180 Mumtmata Gtnmitllioa.
•65 inches. The device is—a square-shaped shield of arms bearing six
quarterings ; above it, an esquire's helmet, with mantling, and on the helmet
is the crest—out of a wreath, a demi-lion rampant, single-tailed (argent),
holding a fleur-de-lis in his dexter gamb. The quarterings on the shield
have not the colours expressed, but are—1st, sable, a lion rampant argent,
for Cromwell ; 2nd, sable, three spear-heads argent, for Caradoc Vreichfras
;
3rd, sable, a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis argent, for Collwyn ap
Tangno, Lord of Efionydd ; 4th, gules, three chevrons argent, for Jestyn ap
Gwrgant, Prince of Glamorgan ; 5th, argent, a lion rampant sable, for Madoc
ap Meredith, the last Prince of Powys ; 6th, or, on a chevron sable a mullet
argent, for Murfyn. Over the centre of the shield is a crescent, as difference
;
and the whole device of the seal is surrounded by a beaded or corded line.
See Plate VI. No. 2.
We are unable to explain why the demi-lion of the crest holds a fieur-
de-lis in his paw, on this seal and on Private Seals Nos. III. and IV. All
heraldic works give the Cromwell crest with either a javelin or a ring in
the lion's paw.
This variety of Oliver's private seal, No. II., is perhaps the most in-
teresting as being the one used by him when signing the Death "Warrant of
King Charles I. An impression of it, in red sealing-wax, not quite perfect,
is there placed at the end of Oliver's signature. The published facsimiles
of the Death Warrant give quite an incorrect representation of this seal,
but we have been enabled to examine the original warrant, now in the
Library of the House of Lords, through the obliging courtesy of W. J.
Thorns, Esq., P. S. A., Deputy Librarian. It is a curious circumstance that
another impression of this seal is placed after Major-General Harrison's
signature on the same Warrant : perhaps he was without a seal at the
moment, and Cromwell, standing by, lent him his.
Impressions of Private Seal No. II. may be seen upon the following
original letters of Oliver Cromwell, all in the British MuseumLetter of 4th May 1645, to Sir Peter Wentworth ; Egerton MSS. No.
2042.
Letter of 15th October 1645, to Sir Thomas Fairfax ; Additional Shane
MSS. No. 1519, Jf. 125, 126.
Letter of 31st July 1646, to the same ; same MS. f. 142.
Letter of 10th August 1646, to the same ; same MS. ff. 129, 130.
€jir iuls nf dDlinn trommel I. 181
Letter of 11th March, 1646-7, to the same ; same MS. ff. 127, 128 (in
black wax).
Letter of 28th June, 1648, to the same; same MS.ff. 177, 178.
Letter of 11th September, 1648, to the same ; Lansdowne MSS. Nor
1236,/. 89, 90.
Private Seal No. III.—This seal is also oval, and is of the same width
but a little higher than No. II., measuring -75 by '65 inches, to the beaded
edging. The design is exactly similar to that of No. II., but slightly en-
larged. See Plate VI., Nos. 3, 4.
Impressions of seal No. III. may be seen upon the following original
letters of Oliver Cromwell, all in the British Museum
—
Letter of 26th August, 1646, to John Eushworth ; Additional Sloane
MSS., No. 1519,/. 143, 144.
Letter of 6th October, 1646, to Sir Thomas Fairfax ; same MS.,
ff 145, 146.
Letter of 19th March, 1646-7, to the same ; same MS., ff. 149, 150.
[Plate VI., No. 4].
Letter of 20th November, 1648, to Messrs. Jenner and Ashe; same
MS.,ff. 183, 184.
A good impression of this seal, in red sealing-wax, is on an original
order to Colonel Thomas Barwis, signed by Oliver Cromwell, and dated the
24th October, 1648 : now in the possession of Henry William Field, Esq.
Private Seal No. IV.—This seal is oval, size '65 by "55 inches, to the
beaded edging. It bears a shield with six quarterings, surmounted by an
esquire's helmet, with mantling. Above the helmet is the crest—out of a
wreath, a single-tailed demi-lion rampant, holding a fleur-de-lis. In the
centre of the shield is a crescent, for difference. Several of the quarterings
seem to have been wrongly engraved, and all have been reversed, those
that should be on the dexter side of the shield are placed on the sinister
side, and vice versa, thus—1st (should be 3rd), a bar between three fleurs-
de-lis. The bar ought to be a chevron, see the description of seal No. II.,
2nd, three spear-heads. 3rd (should be first), a lion rampant. 4th (should
be 6th), a chevron between three mullets, but should be—on a chevron a
mullet. 5th, a lion rampant. 6th (should be 4th), three bars, but should
182 jSttraiarantit C'tnttunBlltEini.
be three chevrons. The whole device is surrounded by a beaded border
line. See Plate VI., No. 5.
The following is a list of the original documents bearing impressions
of this seal
—
Commission of Oliver Cromwell, dated 12th December, 1643, to
Francis Underwood, Esq., to be a Captain of Foot; mentioned by Eev.
Mark Noble on page 411, note, vol. ii., of the third edition of Memoirs of
the Protectoral House of Cromwell.
Letter of 13th August, 1649, from Oliver Cromwell to his daughter-
in-law Dorothy Cromwell; among the family papers of the Cromw.ell-
Eussells now in the possession of Frederick Prescott, Esq., of Oxford Square,
London. This impression of the seal is in golden-brown sealing-wax.
Letter of 22nd August, 1649, to the Speaker Lenthall ; Tanner MSB.,
No. 56, f. 93, in the Bodleian Library, Oxford.
Letter of 26th July, 1651, to the President of the Council of State
;
Tanner MSS., No. 54,/. 120.
Letter of 4th August, 1651, to the Speaker Lenthall ; same MS.,f. 130.
Letter, undated, but probably 1652, to Lieutenant-General Fleetwood
;
Additional MSS., No. 4165, ff. 1, 2, in the British Museum.
Private Seal No. V.—This appears to be the latest of Oliver's private
seals. It is oval, size *9 by '75 inches to the edging. A square-shaped
shield bears the arms in six quarterings, but there is no crescent in the
centre. Above the shield is the crest on an esquire's helmet, with mantling
on each side. The crest is different from that on the previously-described
seals, being—out of a wreath, a demi-lion rampant {argent), double-tailed,
and holding a javelin or spear (or) between his paws. The first five quarter-
ings of the arms are the same as those on seal No. II., but the sixth bears
a lion rampant, probably meant for the first one repeated, i.e., sable, a lion
rampant argent, for Cromwell. The whole design is surrounded by a border
of a cable pattern. See Plate VI., No. 6.
Impressions of this seal are on the following original documents of
Oliver Cromwell's
—
Letter of 23rd August, 1648, to the Committee of Derby House;
Tanner MSS., No. 57, / 230, in the Bodleian Library, Oxford.
Letter of 8th October, 1648, to Speaker Lenthall ; same MS.,f. 346.
€I;b IekIs nf dMtnn €:nmmtll. 183
Letter of 28th October, 1648, to the same ; same MS.J. 393.
Document of 3rd February, 1649-50, signed by Oliver as Lieutenant
of Ireland ; in the possession of Miss Ffarington, of Worden.
Letter of 25th December, 1650, to Colonel Hacker; Lansdowne MSS.,
No. 1236,/. 105, 106, in the British Museum.
Letter of 13th June, 1651, to Speaker Lenthall; Tanner MSS., No. 54,
/. 85.
Letter of 4th September, 1651, to the same ; Tanner MSS., No. 55,
f. 29.
Letter of 8th September, 1651, Evesham, to the same ; same MS.,f. 46.
Letter of 8th September, 1651, Chipping Norton, to the same; same
MS.J. 54.
Letter of 29th November, 1653, to the Lord Mayor; now in the
Library of the City of London, Guildhall.
Petition of Eandall Poole to the Protector, marked as received the
31st March, 1654; among the Interregnum Petitions, vol. x., p. 661, in the
Public Eecord Office, London.
Letter of 22nd September, 1654, to Speaker Lenthall ; Tanner MSS.,
No. 52, /. 130.
Letter of 5th October 1654, to the same ; same MS.,f. 135. The last
two examples are impressed over paper.
Private Seal No. VI.—A small oval seal, size-55 by "45 inches;
bearing a pointed shield with the arms—a chevron between three trefoils.
No colours expressed. A beaded edging surrounds the device. See Plate
VI., No. 7.
The only known impression of this seal is on an original letter of
Oliver Cromwell to Colonel Birch, dated the 30th September, 1651. This
and a previously-mentioned document of Cromwell's belong to Miss Ffar-
ington, of Worden, who has obligingly communicated copies of the seals.
"Whether the arms on this No. VI. are those of one of Cromwell's
ancestors, or whether the original seal was his at all, we are unable to say..
It is possible that Oliver may not have ha 1 his own seal at hand when
writing the letter above-mentioned, and that he borrowed some other
person's seal to fasten it with. It has, however, been suggested to us
that these arms are a blundered representation of those of Collwyn ap
184 JfuHiismaia (Crnimtllhiin.
Tangno (compare the third quartering of seal No. II, above);but the
three trefoils on the small seal ought certainly to be fleurs-de-lis, and there
appears no reason why Cromwell should have used a seal bearing Collwyn's
arms alone.
Private Seal No. VII.—A small seal, bearing a lion rampant only, in
an octagonal beaded border. Size -6 by -5 inches. See plate VI., No. 8.
This seal is said to have been Oliver Cromwell's, but we have never
seen any document of his bearing an impression of it. Dr. Kendrick, of
Warrington, has kindly contributed an impression, taken from a gold
sisfnet-rins, said to have been Cromwell's, and which was once in the
possession of J. Bertrand Payne, Esq., but is now, unfortunately, lost.
Official Signet.—A large circular seal, size 1*3 inches in diameter, to
the outside of the ornamented border. It bears a large, plain, and nearly
square shield of arms. Above it, is the crest on an esquire's helmet, with
mantling at the sides. The whole design is surrounded by a circular orna-
mented border. The crest is—out of a wreath, a demi-lion rampant,
double-tailed, and holding a spear erect. There are six quarterings on
the shield, similar to those on Private Seal No. V., viz. :—1st, sable, a lion
rampant argent, for Cromwell; 2nd, sable, three spear-heads argent, for
Caradoc Vreichfras ; 3rd, sable, a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis argent,
for Collwyn ap Tangno, Lord of Efionydd ; 4th, gules, three chevrons argent,
for Jestyn ap Gwrgant, Prince of Glamorgan ; 5th, argent, a lion rampant
sable, for Madoc ap Meredith, the last Prince of Powys ; 6th, the same as
the 1st, for Cromwell. No colours are expressed on the seal. See Plate
VI., No. 9.
This signet is well engraved, but (like all the private seals described
above) it is clearly not the work of Simon. From its size, which is too
large for private letters, it evidently was an official seal, and we accord-
ingly find it impressed on military passes, protections, commissions, and
other official documents signed by Oliver Cromwell.
There are a good many documents still in existence bearing impres-
sions (over paper wafers) of this signet. The following is a list of those
known to us, but many others are probably extant.
Cjjt IehIs nf (Dlinir (Crnmmtll. 185
Protection, dated 21st October, 1650, granted by Cromwell, when
Lord General and Commander-in-Chief, to the Countess of Lothian. The
original is in the library of the' Marquis of Lothian, at Eewbattle Abbey,
Dalkeith. (Information obligingly communicated by A. Orrock, jun., Esq.,
by the courtesy of the Marquis.)
Commission, dated 17th November, 1651, to John Wells, to be Ensign.
—Additional MSS., No. 5015* /. 25, in the British Museum.
Summons, dated 6th June, 1653, to " Praise-God Barebone Esquire"
to serve as a member for the city of London in the Little Parliament of
1653.
—
Interregnum State Papers, No. 813a, in the Public Eecord Office,
London.
A similar Summons, dated 6th June, 1653, to Jervase Piggott, Esq., to
serve as a member for the county of Nottingham, in the same Parliament.
Lansdowne MSS., No. 1236, /. 107, in the British Museum.
Commission, dated 17th December, 1653, issued by Oliver as Pro-
tector, appointing Colonel Eobert Blake, Colonel George Monk, Major-
General John Desbrow, and Captain William Penn, Admirals and Generals
of the Fleet.—Library of the Society of Antiquaries of London.
Presentation, dated 13th October, 1654, of Eobert Everden to the
vicarage of Brighthelmston, by the Protector.
—
Additional MSS., No. 19399,
/. 81, in the British Museum.
Pass, dated 8th March, 1654-5, for Mr. James Thompson to go to
Elanders.
—
Interregnum State Papers, No. 815a, /. 74, in the Public Eecord
Office, London.
Summons, dated 24th July, 1655, to Sir William Farmer and others
to appear before the Protector's Council of State.
—
Interregnum State Papers,
No. 815a,/. 349, Public Eecord Office.
Presentation, dated 6th October, 1656, of Eichard Stephens to the
rectory of Stanton Barnard, Wiltshire, by the Protector.—Information
kindly communicated by the Eev. Walter Sneyd, of Keele Hall, Stafford-
shire,, who possesses the original document.
Presentation, dated 15th August, 1657, of Thomas Davies to the
rectory of Llantrysant, in the county of Anglesey, by the Protector.—Infor-
mation kindly communicated by John Hopkin, Esq., of Great Grimsby,
who possesses the original document.
Warrant, dated 10th June, 1658, to the Supervisor of Ely House and
186 SumisniEta CrnmmilliitEit.
the Savoy.
—
Interregnum Petitions, etc., vol. ii, B., p. €05, in the Public
Record Office.
The Gbeat Seal foe England.
This seal has already been described on page 19 of the present work,
but we shall here add some facts regarding its history which were there
omitted. See Plate VIII., which is slightly reduced in size from the
original seal (diameter 5'75 inches). Although not a very good impres-
sion, the cast from which it was photographed, was the most perfect one
obtainable anywhere, in a genuine state.
About a year after his accession to the Protectorate, Oliver ordered
that a new Great Seal should be made for him by Thomas Simon, the
Engraver of the Mint and Seals ; as appears by the following entries in the
books of the Council of State-
Thursday, 15th February, 1654-5.—" Ordl by his Highness ye Lo.
Protector, by and wh2 the advise and consent of the Counsel! (1) That the
Motto incompassing that side of the great seale of England which beareth
the pourtraiture of his Highness be Olivarius Dei gratia Reip : Anglice
Scotice et Hiberniae fyc. Protector. (2) That the Motto incompassing the
other side of the Great Seale shalbe Magnum Sigillum Reipub : Anglice
Scotice et Hibernice, fyc. (3) That the Crest and Lyon supporter shalbe
crowned according to the draught in pchmt3 now showed. (4) That the
sizes of the great seale shalbe according to the draught now showne singly
in papr* (6) That M? Thomas Symon doe forthwith goe
about the ingraveing of the sev'rall seales aforemenconed, according to the
Rules foregoeihg and those mentioned in sev'rall ordrs5 of 25 August,
1654."*—Pages 37, 38, Draft Order Book, No. 82, in the Public Record
Office, London.
These orders were approved by the Protector on Tuesday the 6th
March, 1654-5. All the orders concerning seals had been previously read'
1 Ordered. * with. • parchment. 4 paper. 5 orders.
* No orders of this date relating to seals can now be found.
f jit lifllH nf (Dlintr C-inmiiiBll. 187
to the Protector on Friday the 23rd February, but his Highness then took
time to consider them. (Pages 51 and 70, Draft Order Book, No. 82).
' On Friday, the 16th March, in the same year, a Warrant for making
the Great Seal, the Privy Seal, and the Seal Manual, was issued to Thomas
Simon, in this form
—
" In pursuance of Sev'rall orders of his Highness the Lord Protector
by and w* the advise and consent of his Counsell, bearing date the 25th
of Augt 1654, the 15* Febr. 1654, and ye 20* Febr. 1654, copies of w*are hereunto annexed, Theis are to will and require you forthw* to proceed
to. the ingraveing of a Great Seale, a privy Seale, and Seale Manuall, ac-
cording to ye Eules p'scribed1 in the sayd ordrs and ye draughts to" wch
they referr. Hereof you are not to faile, and this togeather w* his High-
ness sayd ordrs shalbe yor sufficient Warrant in that behalfe. Given at
Whitehall this 16* day of March 1654.
" Signed in the Name and by ordr of the Counsell
Hen. Lawrence, Prd.
2
" To Mr Thomas Symon, Sole Cheife
Gravr of the Minte and Seales."
From the Council of State's Draft Order Book, No. 82, page 88 ; and,
according to a note in the margin, this warrant with the three orders and
his drawings were delivered to Simon on the same day.
The preparation of the Great Seal was therefore at once proceeded
with, and in May it seems to have been nearly finished, judging from the
following petition of Simon's, which was read before the Council on Friday,
the 25th May, 1655—
"To the Pdght Honble the Councell, the humble Petition of Thomas
Simon, Cheife Graver of the Minte & Seales,
Sheweth
That whereas your Petitioner hath binn by Order a long time im-
ployed in Moddeling the Greate Seale, & hath monyes due to him for
makeing the Privie Seale, Signet, & other things for the State, & hath taken
up 160 1 valew of'gold & silver for the Greate Seales of England & Ierland,
1 prescribed. ! President.
iss i? n mi stun in CrnmmtUinna.
which are in a good forwardness, which gold & silver hee tooke of a Gold-
smith that has urgent- ocation for his mony. your Petitioner beeing at least
3001 out of purse already in the worke,
humbly prayes that your Hon15 would bee pleased to
graunt a warrant for your Petitioner to bee payed SO'.'l
forthwith, by way of imprest, to bee deducted when
the worke is finished,
and your Petr shall pray,
'*
Simon here states that he has used £160 worth of gold and silver in
making the Great Seals of England and Ireland It therefore seems
probable that the English Great Seal was made of gold, and the Irish one
of silver : unless both seals were partially composed of each metal, Simon s
total charge for the English Great Seal was £2'X 1
, and for the Irish one
£150. ( See his Account for work done from 1650 to 1657, printed at the
end of this chapter).
The advance of £200, asked for by Simon in this petition, was granted
to him by the Council's order of Friday, the 25th May, 1655,+ and a
"Warrant of that date was issued by them to Mr. Gualter Frost, Treasurer
of the Council's Contingencies, for paying to Thomas Simon the sum of
£200 " towards ye Charge of ye Great Seales of England and Ireland, &c,
to be deducted out of ye whole when y*5 worke is fynished^:"
From the records quoted above, it undoubtedly appears that the
English Great Seal of Oliver was not made until the summer of 1655. Acurious statement in a letter from Mr. Pell to Secretary Thurloe, dated the
22nd July, 1654, is therefore somewhat inexplicable. Pell savs that
—
" the weekly sheet of news printed at Genoa, July 1, [1654], by Farroni,
tells us that the Lord Protector hath changed the Great Seal of England;
setting upon the new one his own effigies on horseback, with this inscrip-
tion— Olirero, U Grand Imperatore d'Inghilterra, di Scotia, Hibernia e
* Interregnum Petitions, rf<:. , voL xiL, p. 407 ; Pnblic Record Office.
+ Page 101, Draft Order Book, Xo. S3. Order approved on the 1st June, 1655.
* Page 155, Council's Money Warrant Book, Xo. 126.
$jji itali nf (Dlintr CrnraniEll. 189
Francia, e Protettore de protestanti, e delle chiese riformate. (Oliver, the
great Emperor of England, of Scotland, Ireland, and France, and Protector
of the Protestants, and of the Keformed Churches.*)" On referring to page
19, above, the reader will see how incorrect this description from the
Italian newspaper is.
When Oliver Cromwell was made Protector on the 16th December,
1653, the Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal of England were Bul-
strode "Whitelocke, Eichard Keble (Serjeant-at-law), and John Lisle. On
the 4th April, 1654, Sir Thomas Widdrington was appointed in place of
Keble, deceased, and the Protector's Letters Patent were issued on the 3d
August, 1654, for Bulstrode Whitelocke, Sir Thomas Widdrington, and
John Lisle to be the three Commissioners (Patent enrolled on page 4,
Patent Boole, No. 12, in the Public Eecord Office). In June, 1655, the
seal was taken from them by Oliver, and delivered to Nathaniel Fiennes
and John Lisle, who were made the Lords Commissioners of the Great
Seal of England, and so continued until Oliver's death.
Although made, or ordered to be made, in the spring of 1655, Oliver's
new Great Seal, bearing a portrait of him on horseback, does not appear to
have been actually used for sealing documents until a long time afterwards.
The Great Seal previously in use, also made by Simon, was that of the
Commonwealth, dated 1651, which may be thus described
—
Obverse, maps
of England and Ireland, with all the names of the counties, chief towns,
etc. In the upper part of the field is an oval ornamented shield bearing
St. George's cross, and in the lower part a similar shield bearing the Irish
harp. Legend—THE • GEEAT • SEALE • OF • ENGLAND • 1651.
Reverse, view of the interior of the House of Commons, with all the
members, and the Speaker, sitting. Legend—IN • THE - THIED •
YEAEE • OF • FEEEDOME • BY • GODS BLESSING • EESTOEED •
1651. Size : 5£ inches in diameter. See G. Vertue's Works of Thomas
Simon, plates vi. and vii.
The late Mr. W. Durrant Cooper, in a paper on the Commonwealth's
Great Seals {Archaeologia, voL xxxviii., part i.), states that the old seal of
1651 was continued in use for more than a year and a half after Cromwell
* The Eev. Dr. R. Vaughan'a "Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell," London 1839,
vol. i., p. 33.
190 J! it mi smut ii Crnmnullianii.
had ordered his new Great Seal in February, 1654-5. To prove this, he
instances an impression of the seal of 1651 appended to a document
dated the 25th February, 1655-6, in the collection of the Society of Anti-
quaries ; and a second impression of the same seal belonging to a patent
of the 8th September, 1656, in the British Museum, Shane MSS.,
No. 3243.
In the sale of the late Mr. W. T. B. Ashley's collection of Autographs,
at Messrs. Sotheby and Wilkinson's, March, 1876, there was a document of
the Protector Oliver, dated the 12th February, 1657-8, which also had
affixed to it the Commonwealth Great Seal of 1651. Also, through the
obliging permission of the Secretary of State for India, the Author has been
shown an impression of the Great Seal of 1651, which is attached to a
Warrant of Oliver's, dated at Westminster, the 16th August, 1655, and
addressed to the Commissioners of the Treasury, directing the repayment
of £50,000 (money previously borrowed), to the " Governor and Company
of Merchants trading to East India." This document and seal are nowpreserved in the India Office, Westminster.
Beturning now to the Great Seal of Oliver, described on page 19 of
this work, we have to state that there are, in the British Museum, two
incomplete impressions of this seal. One of them is merely a small dab of
yellow wax, about two inches in diameter, impressed on both sides from
the centre of Oliver's Great Seal, and affixed to a document dated the 23rd
October, 1657 (Cotton Charter, No. xvii., 35). It seems to have been some-
times the practice, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, to impress
a small piece of wax with only the central portion of the Great Seal, pro-
bably in order to effect a saving of wax.
Another impression of Oliver's Great Seal, in yellow wax, and nearly
perfect, is in the British Museum, a separate detached seal, Cotton Charter,
No. xxxix., 30.
The following extracts from the Mercurius Politicus newspaper, no. 433,
9th to 16th September, 1658, page 832, show that Oliver's Great Seal, as
well as some of his other seals, were used after his death on documents of
his son, the Protector Bichard
—
€lji IbuIs nf dM'tinr CtnmntHI. 191
September 11.—His Highness his Warrant this day passed the Great
Seal of England, commanding and authorising the Lords Commissioners of
the said Great Seal to make use of the old Great Seal used in the life time
of his late Highness for sealing of Patents, Commissions, Writs, and other
things, until a new Great Seal can be provided with such Sculpture, In-
scriptions and Impressions, as his Highness shall think fit to direct.
" September 14.—The like Warrant passed for his Highness Signet and
Privy Seal."
Accordingly, we find several documents existing, which were executed
during Eichard's Protectorate, hut had impressions of Oliver's Great Seal
attached to them. In the care of Fredk. Prescott, Esq., among other
articles which have descended in the Cromwell family, is the original
Patent from the Protector Eichard re-appointing Henry Cromwell Lord
Deputy of Ireland. It is dated the 6th October, 1658, and to it is ap-
pended a good impression, in yellow wax, of Oliver's English Great Seal.
In the British Museum is another Patent of Eichard Cromwell's,
dated the 4th March, 1658-9, with a complete impression, fairly preserved,
of Oliver's Great Seal attached to it (Additional Charter, No. 14975).
The English Great Seal of Oliver Cromwell is illustrated in the fol-
lowing works
—
G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, quarto, London, 1753, plates xvii.
and xviii. ; Harrison's edition of Rapin's History of England, folio, London,
1789, vol. hi., p. 803 (the reverse or arms side only, erroneously joined to the
House of Commons side of the 1651 "Great Seal of the Commonwealth
;
S. Thompson's series of British Museum Photographs of Seals, no. 974, plate
xxiv., 1, 2.
Besides the original wax impressions of this Great Seal, there exist
several casts of it in metal. They were made of copper, lead, etc., probably
after Cromwell's time, and are generally tooled up and slightly altered by
hand chasing. They are of little interest or value.
192 J! it mis urn in CrninmBlUnnn.
The Privy Seal foe England.
On page 20 of this work we have already given a few particulars
regarding Oliver's Privy Seal for England, but, in following Vertue's en-
graving, we have fallen into two errors. The actual diameter of the seal
is 2 -3 inches, and the inscription around it is as follows—OLIVAEIVS •
DEI: GEA: EEIPVB : ANGLLE • SCOTLE ET • HIBEENLE &c
PROTECTOE.The original matrix of this seal is now preserved in the Ashmolean
Museum, at Oxford. Our illustration, plate i., no. 7, is taken from a sharp
impression off this matrix, obligingly sent to the Author by J. P. Earwaker,
Esq., Deputy Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum.
The matrix is circular, 2 -3 inches in diameter, '4 of an inch thick, and
seven ounces in weight. It is made of silver. The edge is plain and
square, the back flat, smooth, and plain, except from a small Maltese cross
engraved in outline near the upper edge. This curious and valuable relic
was presented to the Ashmolean Museum by Mrs. Calvert, of Bath, in
1824, and with it was the following memorandum
—
" The original Privy Seal of Oliver Cromwell came into the possession
of the Preemans from Ann Webb, one of the daughters of John Webb, of
Broomfield, Essex, Esquire, who married into the Piennes family. Teste
Eich. Freeman, grandson."
ISTathaniell Piennes was the Keeper or Commissioner of His Highness'
Privy Seal (see Privy Seal Book, No. 13, in the Public Eecord Office).
When Vertue engraved this seal in 1753, the matrix belonged to
Thomas Freeman, of Chelmsford.
—
Works of Thomas Simon, London, 1753,
page 65.
On referring to the State Papers of the period, now preserved in the
Public Eecord Office, we find that the preparation of a Privy Seal was
ordered by the Protector Oliver on the same day as his Great Seal, viz. :
—
Thursday, 15th February, 1654-5.—"Ordered by his Highness ye Lo.
Protector, by and w* the advise and consent of the CounselL That
the privy seale [be] according to the largest draught of 3 in another papr
now showne."
—
Page 37, Draft Order Book, No, 82, of the Council of
State.
<EIjb $m\i if (Dlimr Crorattnll. !9 3
On Tuesday, 20th February, 1654-5, it was
—
" Ordered by his Highness ye Lo. Protector, by and wh ye advise and
consent of the Counsel!, That the Motto incompassing the privy seale be
Oiivarius Dei gratia reipub : Anglice Scotice Francice et Hibernia $$c. Pro-
tector."— Page 45, Draft Order Booh, No. 82.
The word " Franciee " here inserted in the motto is no doubt an error
of the Clerk to the Council, as that word does not appear on the seal.
The two orders just quoted were approved on Tuesday, the 6th March,
1654-5.
A warrant, dated the 16th of the same month, directing Thomas Simon
to make the Privy Seal, and other seals, has been already printed in our
account of the English Great Seal.
The following recommendation was made to the Protector on
—
Friday, 20th April, 1655.—Ordered "That it be offered to his High-
ness, as the advise of the Counsell, that his Highness will please to make
use of a Privy Seale."
—
Page 37, Draft Order Book, No. 83.
Thomas Simon's charge for the English Privy Seal was £20. See his
Account for work done from 1650 to 1657, printed at the end of this
chapter.
The Seal foe Letters of State.
On Wednesday, the 5th September, 1655, Thomas Simon submitted to
the Protector's Council of State a drawing which he had prepared for a
" Seal for Letters to Foreign Princes and States." This drawing was ap-
proved, and the Council ordered that Simon should forthwith proceed to
make the seal, according to this design. This order is printed at length
under our description of the seal for the English Council, below.
The seal was therefore made, and in his Account for work done from
1650 to 1657 Simon charged £25 for it, as the " steel seal for letters of
state." See the Account, printed at the end of this chapter.
194 jf ttttitsttnttn (CrnramiUiflnit.
Several impressions of this seal, over paper wafers, are still extant,
but not in very good preservation. They are oval, size 1/9 by 1/7 inches*
and bear a lion sejant holding a shield with the Protector's usual arms, viz
:
Quarterly, 1st and 4th, St. George's cross, for England; 2nd, St. Andrew's
cross, for Scotland ; 3rd, the Irish harp ; over all, on an inescutcheon, a
lion rampant, Cromwell's paternal arms. Above is the legend—PAX •
QVvEEITVB • BELLO, the same motto as on Oliver's coins. Pound the
edge of the seal is Simon's usual wreathed border of leaves. The design is
in but slight relief. See woodcut.
Although intended chiefly for "letters to foreign princes and states,"
this seal was also used on letters which the Protector sent to persons in
England and Scotland. Our illustration is taken from an impression on a
letter from Oliver to General Montagu, dated the 11th August, 1657. The
original letter is now preserved in the British Museum, Additional Ayscough
MSS., No. 12098. The signature only is Oliver's. See Thomas Carlyle's
Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, letter ccxix., vol. v., p. 78, popular
edition, 1872. This letter was formerly in the possession of Thomas Lister
Parker, Esq., of Browsholme Hall, Yorkshire, and copies of the signature
and seal are engraved on a plate facing page 238 of the Eev. Dr. T. D.
Whitaker's History of the Parish of Whalley, 3rd edition, 1818.
There are two impressions of this seal, over paper wafers, in the
General Eegister House, Edinburgh. One is on a letter bearing Oliver's
sign-manual, dated Whitehall, the 28th July, 1657, and addressed to the
Commissioners of the Treasury and Exchequer in Scotland. The second
impression is on another letter, addressed to the same persons, also signed
by Oliver, and dated Westminster, the 26th September, 1657.
'£1)2 IeeIs ttf dHinrr tfrntnttll. 19 5
There was however another seal used by Oliver which is exactly
similar to the one just described, except in size. It is oval, and measures
1'5 by l-35 inches. We have met with only two impressions of it. The
first is impressed over paper on a letter signed " Oliver P.," dated White-
hall, the 19th February, 1656-7, without address, but intended apparently
for one of the Major-Generals. This document is in the Public Eecord
Office, London. The second impression is also over paper, on an original
warrant to Colonel Eobert Gibbon, Governor of Jersey, concerning the
revenues of that island, dated the 1st April, 1658, with the Protector's
sign-manual at the top. The warrant is among the papers of Cromwell's
descendants, now in the care of P. Prescott, Esq.
The Signet foe England.
This seal, which in the State Papers is called both " the Seal Manual
"
and " the Signet for England," was made by Thomas Simon, pursuant to
several orders of the Protector Oliver's Council of State. The first notice
of it occurs under date of
—
Thursday, 15th February, 1654-5.— Ordered ''That ye Seale Manuall
be in the ingraveing of it fitted to make impressions upon wax."—Page 38,
Draft Order Book, No. 82.
This order was approved by the Protector on Tuesday, the 6th March,
1654-5 (page 70, same book). On Friday, the 16th March, the Council
issued a warrant to Thomas Simon, directing him to make a Seal Manual,
and other seals, forthwith. This warrant is printed in our account of the
Great Seal, page 187 above.
These are all the notices relating to this seal that we have found in
the State Papers. There is no doubt that Simon made this Seal Manual
or Signet, according to orders, as a charge of £15 for the Signet for
England appears in his Account for work done between 1650 and 1657
(printed at the end of this chapter).
The seal which we take to be the Signet here meant, is an improved
copy, by Thomas Simon, of a nearly similar signet used by Oliver Crom-
well on official documents, such as military commissions and passes, etc.,
before he was made Protector. The older seal was circular (see plate vi., no.
9, and page 184 above), but Simon's Signet is slightly oval, and measures
196 tfJtttnisnnttn (Crnramilliniin.
14 by P3 inches. It bears Oliver's family coat-of-arms on a shield with
six quarterings, together with his crest, a helmet, and mantling. The
mantling is elegantly designed, and is similar in style to that on the
English Privy Seal (plate i., no. 7). The crest is—out of a wreath, a demi-
lion rampant, double-tailed, and holding a spear. The helmet is side-faced
and barred, being the helmet proper to a prince. It is curious that a side-
faced helmet is used here, as the full-faced one of a sovereign is used on all
the Protector's Great and Privy Seals. The quarterings on the shield are
the same as those on the official signet of Cromwell before he was made
Protector, see page 184 above. The seal is surrounded by a wreathed
border of leaves. See Plate TL, Xo. 10.
"We have been obligingly informed by the Rev. Canon J. E. Jackson,
that an impression of this Signet, over paper, is on a letter from the Pro-
tector to "the Lord Ambassador WTiitelocke," dated "Whitehall, the 3rd
February, 1653-4. The original letter is in the possession of the Marquis
of Bath, at Longleat.
It will, however, be observed that the dates of this and the under-
mentioned document are prior to the dates of the orders of the Council
quoted above. This circumstance may perhaps be accounted for, by the
supposition that Simon had actually made the Signet before he received
the formal written orders to do so.
Another impression of this seal, over a paper wafer, may be seen in
the British Museum (Additional Ayscough MS., No. 5014), on the original
Instructions of the Protector Oliver to General Charles Fleetwood as Lord
Deputy of Ireland, dated the 17th August, 1654.
This Signet is engraved in G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 1753,
plate xxxi., but the illustration is a little larger than the original.
The Seal foe the English Council.
On Thursday, the 15th February, 1654-5, the Protector's English
Council of State appointed a Committee to consider what design should be
adopted on a new seal for themselves. It was ordered
—
" That it be referred to ye Lo. Lambert, Col. ffyennes, Col. Jones, and
<&>\i IeuIs nf (Olintr (CrnmiBlI. 197
Sr Charles Wolsley, to consider of the fforme of a seale for the Counsel! of
his Highness ye Lo. Protector."—Page 38, Draft Order Book, No. 82.
Also, on Wednesday the 29th August, 1655, the English Council
made the following order respecting a proposed seal for the Council in
Scotland
—
Ordered, " That upon the Seale for the Counsell of Scotland there be
ingraven the armes of Scotland, with his Highness Coat of Armes upon an
Escutcheon of ptence.1"
—
Page 1, Draft Order Book, No. 85.
According to a marginal note in the book, this order was sent to
Thomas Simon on the 31st August. Consequently, on the 5th September,
Simon offered to the Council, for their approval, four drawings of seals,
three of which were to be for the three Councils of England, Scotland, and
Ireland, and the fourth for sealing letters of state to foreign princes. The
subjoined order was made on this occasion
—
Wednesday, 5th September, 1655.—" Ffoure draughts of Seales being
ppared2 by Mr Tho. Simon, his Highness Graver for the Mint and Seales,
were this day psented3, viz', one Seale for Letters to Forreine Princes &
States, one for the Counsell of Engld, one for the Counsell of Scotld, and
one for the Counsell of Ireld. Ord. [ered] That the said Mr Symon doe
forthwith proceed to ppare the said fower4 Seales according to the said
Draughts, leaveing out of the sd5 three Seales for the Counsell of Engld)
Scotland, and Ireland, this Motto, Pax quaritur bello."—Page 21, Draft
Order Book, No. 85.
It appears that, by the 26th of the next month, Simon had finished
making the seals for the three Councils. Those for the Scottish and Irish
Councils were approved of, but the seal for the English Council was
rejected, and a new one ordered to be engraved with the legend " SIGIL-
LVM CONSILII" only, without the addition of "ANGLIC." The fol-
lowing is the entry in the English Council Book
—
Friday, 26th October, 1655. {ante meridiem).—"Mr Thomas Symon, the
graver of his Highness Mint and Seales, having according to former order
prepared a Seale for the Counsell, as also Seales for the Counsell in Scot-
land and Ireland, and the same being now psented6 to his Highness and
the Counsell,' Ordered That ye Seales for the Counsell for Scotland and
1 pretence. ' prepared. 8 presented. 4 four. 5 said. 8 presented.
198 Mnmnmzia <£rnmm? llinna.
Ireland be approved of; [And] That another Seale for his Highness Coun-
sel! be prepared w^out adding ye word (Anglia) in the motto thereof."
—
Page 108, Draft Order Book, No. 85.
It appears that Simon charged £14 for the seal of the English Council
(see his Account for work done from 1650 to 1657, printed at the end of
this chapter).
This seal was no doubt made of steel, and was circular, l -8 inches in
diameter. The design consisted of a large ornamented shield, surrounded
by a laurel wreath, and bearing the Protector's usual arms, viz : Quarterly,
1st and 4th, St. George's cross; 2nd, St. Andrew's cross; 3rd, the Irish
harp; with the Cromwells' lion rampant on an escutcheon of pretence.
Outside of the shield and wreath is a circular band, shaded with fine lines
or graining, bearing the legend—SIGILLVM CONCLLLII. The seal has
a wreathed border of leaves round the edge. See Plate VI., No. 11.
The design is not in high relief, but it is very delicately engraved,
and beautifully finished by Simon. It will also be seen to correspond
with the orders of the Council, quoted above. A description of the seal
previously used by the Council, from December, 1653, to November, 1655,
will be found in our notes to Simon's Account, printed at the end of this
chapter.
The only impression we have seen of the seal for Oliver's Council of
State in England, is on a document in the Public Eecord Office, Interregnum
Letters and Papers, No. 816a,/o. 181 verso. It is a fairly preserved impres-
sion, made over paper, on the back of a letter addressed to "Colonel
William Boteler* at Oundle," dated Whitehall, the 22nd August, 1656,
and " signed in the name and by order of His Highness and the Council
"
by Henry Lawrence, President.
George Vertue, in his Works of Thomas Simon, London, 1753, has
engraved this seal on plate xxv., but not quite accurately. He puts " CON-SILII " instead of " CONCILLII," in the inscription. He states, on page
42, that his illustration is taken from the seal affixed to an order sent to
Guernsey by Oliver Cromwell.
* Butler, Major-General for the counties of Northampton, Bedford, Rutland, and Hun-tingdon.
<B||! IjhIs nf dblinr foivmrnill, 199
The Seals for the English Law Courts.
When Oliver Cromwell was made Protector he did not have any new
seals made for the English Law Courts, hut continued in use those which
had heen made by order of the Parliament in February, 1648-9. Weshall now briefly describe those seals of the Commonwealth that we have
found affixed to deeds of the Protector's period, although the matrices or
dies of the seals were engraved in February or March, 1648-9, by Thomas
Simon.
The Court of Upper Bench.—This court corresponded to that previously
termed the King's Bench, but on the Parliament's assumption of the
supreme power in 1648-9, the title of " King's " had of course been changed.
Henry Eolle was Chief Justice of the Upper Bench under Oliver, until the
5th June, 1655, when he resigned. John Glynn succeeded him, was ap-
pointed on the 15th June, 1655, and resigned in January, 1659-60.*
The only impression of the Seal of the Upper Bench that we have
met with, is on a Patent of the Protector Eichard Cromwell's, dated the
27th January, 1658-9, and now preserved in the British Museum, Campbell
Charter, No. xix., 19. The wax is however so much damaged that it is
impossible to describe it fully. It is circular, and has devices on both
sides. Obverse, maps of England and Ireland, surrounded by the sea.
Near the top of the field is a shield bearing St. George's cross, and near
the bottom is another bearing the Irish harp. Around all is a circular
band bearing a legend, illegible on the impression above-mentioned, but
reading probably—SIGILLVM • PEO;BEEVIBVS • COEAM • IVSTI-
CIAEIIS • 1 * BANCI • 1648. (Seal for writs before the Jus-
tices of the Upper Bench, 1648). Eeverse, view of the interior of the House
of Commons, with the members sitting. The lower quarter of the field is
marked off by a horizontal line, and contains a shield bearing St. George's
cross, with a palm branch at each side. Legend around the seal—EST •
THE • FIEST • YEAEE OF • FEEEDOME BY GODS BLESSING
EESTOEED • 1648. There is an ornamental edging round both sides of
the seal, and the diameter to the outside of this border is 3'9 inches.
* Lord Campbell's "Lives of the Chief Justices of England."
t Word here illegible on the seal. It may have been " Superioris."
200 jGamisntatii Cizmmtlliana.
This seal does not seem to have been known to George Vertue, as it
is neither mentioned nor engraved in his book on the Works of Thomas
Simon.
The Court of Common Bench.—This was the same as the former Court
of Common Pleas, but its name had also been changed by the Parliament
after the death of Charles I. Oliver St. John was Chief Justice of the
Common Bench from 1649 t6 1660*
The seal for this court,—most probably made by Simon in March,
1649, and continued in use from that time to the Eestoration—bore on the
Obverse, maps of England and Ireland, with the two shields of arms,
exactly as on the seal for the Upper Bench ; but the legend reads—SIGIL-
LYM • PEO • BEEVIBV8 COEAM • IVSTICIAEIIS • COMVXISBANCI - 1648. (Seal for writs before the Justices of the Common Bench,
1648). Eeverse, view of the House of Commons. Below, a shield bear-
ing St. George's cross, supported by two mermaids. Around the whole is
the legend—1ST • THE • FIEST • YEAEE • OF FEEEDOME • BY •
GODS • BLESSING • EESTOEED 1648. There is an ornamental edging
round both sides. Diameter of the seal to the outside of this border, 3-
8
inches.
This seal is engraved in G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, London,
1753, plate hi, but the obverse legend is incorrectly given. Our descrip-
tion is taken from impressions of this seal in the British Museum, one
being attached to a deed of the Protector Oliver's, dated the 30th January,
1656-7 (Additional Charter, No. 12679) ; and a second on a deed dated the
23d October, 1657 (Additional Charter, No. 5639). A third impression, in
the Museum, is affixed to a Commonwealth deed in the name of the
"Keepers of the Liberty of England," dated the 7th February, 1650-1 (Ad-
ditional Charter, No, 982).
The Exchequer Court.—Although we have been unable to discover
any impression of it, there was without doubt a seal made for tins court.
The following order of the House of Commons shows that new seals were
made for all the law courts soon after the death of Charles I. :
—
* Lord Campbell's " Lives of the Chief Justices."
fljB linls nf (Minn «Crntnmill. 201
" Zh'e iSfflSSaft', 3° Februarii, 1648 (-9.)
" Mr. Love reports from the Committee of Lords and Commons for the
publick Bevenue, their Desire touching the Custom-house Books for the
Year ended 25 Decembris 1648 : And the Exchequer Writs and Process,
bearing Date the last Day of Michaelmas Term last, and the Three-and-
twentieth of January last, should be sealed with the old Exchequer Seal.
" Ordered, That the Seal of the Court of Exchequer be altered in the
like manner as the Great Seal is altered : And that the Title of the said
Seal be, from henceforth, Sigillum Scaccarii Publici : And that the Writs
and Process to issue out of the said Court, which bear Date the last Dayof Michaelmas Term last, and the Three-and-twentieth of January last,
shall be sealed with the old Exchequer Seal.
" And it is referred to the former Committee appointed to prepare the
Great Seal, to prepare an Act for that Purpose : And are also to prepare
an Act for Alteration of all other Seals belonging to the several Courts in
Westminster Hall : And they are likewise to consider of the Antedating of
Writs."
—
Journals of the House of Commons, vol. vi., page 130.
There is no specimen of the Commonwealth's Exchequer Seal in the
British Museum, nor is it engraved or mentioned by George Vertue in his
description of the Works of Thomas Simon.
William Steel was Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer under the
Protector, until August, 1656, when he was made Lord Chancellor of
Ireland.
The Court of Probate.—In the British Museum is an imperfect im-
pression of a seal of the Protector's Court of Probate. It is attached to a
deed of Oliver's granting administration to Alice Bennett, widow of
William Bennett, of the city of Gloucester. It is dated the 3d December,
1657, " given at London under the seal of the Court for Probate of Wills
and granting Administrations." (Additional Charter, No. 13968, presented
by Sir W. C. Trevelyan, Bart.)
This impression of the seal is a fragment only. It has been oval,
size 3'8 by 2'4 inches. The design is on one side only ; in the centre is a
large shield bearing St. George's cross, and around it is a legend, of which
the only letters visible are the commencement of the word SIGILLVM.
202 jfJtimismitta iCrnnmirllhnn.
Among the papers of Cromwell's descendants, now in the care of
Frederick Prescott, Esq., is another fragment of this seal.
The Seals foe the Admiralty.
In Thomas Simon's Account for work done between 1650 and 1657,
there occurs a charge of £4 . 10s. for " two seals for the Commissioners of
the Admiralty." These seals were very probably made about December,
1653, in accordance with the two following orders of the Parliament
—
" Tuesday, the 14th of December, 1652.
" Ordered, That the Commissioners appointed by the Act constituting
Commissioners for the Managing and Ordering the Affairs of the Ad-
miralty and Navy, hare Power to make use of the Seal of the Anchor for
their "Warrants and Commissions ; And that the Seal of the Anchor, which
is with the Council of State, be delivered unto the said Commissioners,
to be made use of accordingly."
—
Journals of the House of Commons, vol. vii,
page 229.
" Monday, the 5th of December, 1653.
" Ordered, That the Commissioners appointed by the Act constituting
Commissioners for the Managing and Ordering the Affairs of the Ad-miralty and Navy, have Power to make Use of the Seal of the Anchor,
now in their Custody, for their "Warrants and Commissions."
—
Ibid, page 362.
"We have endeavoured to discover impressions of the seals above-
mentioned, but we cannot identify them with absolute certainty. The
following are, however, descriptions of some seals used on Admiralty docu-
ments during the period of the Protectorate; and Nos. 2 and 3 are
apparently Simon's work, and may be the two seals for which he charged
£4 . 10s. in his Account.
€\\t Stall nf (Dlinir du r u mm e i I
.
203
No. I.—The largest seal is circular, size T15 inches in diameter. It
has the representation of an anchor in the centre, and to it is attached a
cable, which is disposed in loops and curves around the anchor. The
whole is surrounded by a wreath formed of a laurel and a palm branch
united.
A good impression of this seal is on a letter from the Commissioners
of the Admiralty to the Commissioners of the Treasury, dated Whitehall,
the 15th April, 1658 (now in the Public Eecord Office).
No. II.—This seal is similar in design to No. I., but it is smaller,
being just oue inch in diameter. It is also of better work, and appears to
have been engraved by Simon.
An impression is on a letter from the Commissioners of the Admiralty
to the Commissioners of the Treasury, dated Whitehall, the 12th Novem--
ber, 1657, and another impression of this seal is on a letter from the same
persons to the Council of State, dated the 14th October, 1658. Both these
letters are in the Public Eecord Office.
No. III.—*-The third seal also bears the anchor and cable within a
wreath, like the two previous seals, but it is much smaller, measuring only
•6 of an inch in diameter. It was perhaps also made by Simon.
We have seen several impressions of this seal among the State Papers
in the Eecord Office, but they are all so much damaged that it is impos-
sible to give any illustration of them. One is on a letter from the Com-
missioners of the Admiralty to the Commissioners of the Navy, dated
Whitehall, the 19th May, 1656 ; a second is on a letter from the same
persons to the President of the Council of State, dated the 8th December,
1657 ; and another impression is on a letter from Major-General Thomas
Kelsey, one of the Commissioners of the Admiralty, to " the Lord Dis-
browe," received the 7th January, 1657-8.
204 #i mi smut it Crnmrat llinnn.
The Commissioners of the Admiralty during Cromwell's Protectorate
were—Maj or-General Robert Blake, Colonel John Clerke, Mr. Edward
Hopkins, Major-General Thomas Kelsey, and Colonel Edward Salmon
;
who each received a salary of £400 per annum. {Council Entry Book, 4th
September, 1656.)
The Seals fok Approbattox of Preachers.
During the Commonwealth period the clergy were chiefly Presby-
terians, but it appears that the Protector tolerated nearly all the Protestant
sects. At the beginning of the year 1654, as Thomas Carlyle remarks,
" Episcopacy being put down, and Presbytery not set up," church govern-
ment had been for some years past " all a Church-Anarchy."* Therefore,
in March, 1653-4, Oliver and his Council made an Ordinance " for appoint-
ing Commissioners for Approbation of Publique Preachers," anno 1653,
cap. 16, passed the 20th March, 1653-4, confirmed anno 1656, cap. 10. See
Henry Scobell's Collection of Acts and Ordinances, London, 1658, part ii.,
pages 279, 2S0.
By this Ordinance thirty-eight persons were made Commissioners,, or
a " Board of Triers," for the purpose of making trial or examination of
every minister who had been nominated to any benefice. Xo one was
allowed to take any public lecture or benefice, with profits annexed,
without being first judged and approved by these Commissioners. Of the
thirty-eight, nine were laymen, and twenty-nine were clergy ; some were
Presbyterians, some Independents, and a few Anabaptists.
On the 23rd June, 1654, another Ordinance was passed " for giving
further time for Approbation of Publique Preachers," anno 1654, cap. 30,
confirmed anno 1656, cap. 10 (Scobell's Collection, part ii., page 313). The
Board continued to sit at Whitehall until the latter part of the year 1659.
After examination, if the candidate was approved, the Commissioners
granted "admission to such Benefice or Lecture by an Instrument in
writing under a Common Seal, to be appointed by His Highness, and
under the hand of the Register or Registers for the time being."
—
Ordinance
of the 20th March, 1653-4.
* Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, popular edition, 1S71, vol. iv., page 6.
€Jjj $talt nf (Dlintr fitzmmtll. 205
Two of these Approbations or Licences are preserved in the British
Museum. They are written on parchment, and each one has a seal attached.
The first is the approval of Eichard Bryan to the rectory of Whaddon,
Wilts, dated the 20th August, 1656 (Additional Charter, No. 5718) ; and
the other is the approbation of Daniel Norris to the vicarage of Tetbury,
Gloucestershire, dated the 17th November, 1658 (Additional Charter,
No. 5279).
There is also an engraving of the same seal in Edmund Calamy's Con-
tinuation of the Account of the Ministers, etc., who were ejected after the
Restoration in 1660, London, 1727, vol. i., page 462. There is here printed
a copy of the original presentation of Edmund Calamy, the younger, to the
rectory of Moreton, in Essex, dated the 20th April, 1659, and a woodcut
represents the seal which was attached to it.
The seal used on the above-mentioned three documents is circular,
and measures two inches in diameter. In the centre is an oval ornamented
shield, bearing St. George's cross. Around is the legend—THE SEALE •
FOE • APPBOBATION OF PVBLICK • PEEACHEES-, between
circles of double lines. This seal was very probably the one made by
Thomas Simon, and for which he charged £5 . 15s. in his Account for work
done between 1650 and 1657. See woodcut.
There is, however, a second seal for Approbation of Ministers, the
silver matrix of which is now in the possession of Ayscough Fawkes, Esq.,
of Farnley Hall, Otley, Yorkshire. This seal was evidently prepared during
206 31 am is ran in CmramiUtoit. .
the time of the Commonwealth, but as we have never been able to find
any old document bearing an impression of it, we are unable to fix the
exact date at which it was in use, if ever used. It may have been made
for the Westminster Assembly of divines, who sat from the 1st July, 1643,
to the 22nd February, 1649, and it may have been used for sealing the
licences to preachers granted by them. We consider that the first-
described seal, with the St. George's cross, was the only one used during
the Protectorate, or from 1653 to 1659, and that Mr. Fawkes's seal, if used
at all, must have been used at some previous period.
This second seal is oval, and measures 2"6 by 23 inches ; and the
matrix is one-fifth of an inch in thickness. In the centre, between two
palm branches tied together, is an open Bible, inscribed THE WOED OFGOD. Around all, and outside of an inner eircle, is the legend—THE "
SEALE • FOE • APPBOBATION • OF • MINISTERS. A rose is before
the first word ; and an ornamental wreathed border surrounds the whole.
The workmanship is good, but we are not sure that this seal was made by
Thomas Simon. See Plate VI., No. 12, which is taken from an impression
off the original silver matrix, kindly contributed by Ayscough Fawkes, Esq.
The history of the matrix or die has also been conujiunicated by him, and
is as follows
—
The seal was presented to Mr. Fawkes's grandfather, Walter Fawkes,
Esq., by Mr. Thomas Lister Parker, of Browsholme Hall, Yorkshire, on
the 15th December, 1819. Accompanying it was an undated letter from" Peter Eobinson " to the " Eev. Mr. Marsh," which has the two following
indorsements
—
1st, " This letter was found at Browsholme with the Seal, and pur-
chased by the then possessor, Mr. Ed. Parker, 1661."
2nd, " And is now with the Seal presented to Walter Fawkes, Esq.,
by T. L. Parker, of Browsholme, Dec. 15th, 1819."
In this letter, Mr. Eobinson states that he has sold the seal to Mr.
Marsh for £55, and says—" I had (the seal) from one Gaptain Cossley, whohad it from his father, a very eminent merchant in London, who was a
great republican and friend of Oliver's, he having received it from some
person that was familiar with Oliver, and kept it as a memorial of him.
But being forced to go on some extraordinary business to Jamaica, he
presented it to his son, who not being of the same mind as his father,
€{u> IbkIb sf dHtnn flmramill. 207
was more willing to part with it, so it came into my hands PefRobinson,"
The seal, accompanied by this manuscript letter, was sold for £29 . 8s.,
as lot 266 in the sale of Mr. Parker's library at Sotheby's, on the 29th
April, 1815, but it was no doubt bought in, as Mr. Parker afterwards gave
it to Mr. Walter Fawkes in 1819.
This second seal has been engraved in Mr. T. L. Parker's Description
of Browsholme Hall, privately printed, 1815 ; and on page 241 of the Eev.
Dr. T. D. Whitaker's History of the Parish of Whalley, 3rd edition, 1818.
The Seal for the County of Dueham.
On Friday, the 5th September, 1656, it was ordered by the Council of
State
—
" That Mr Thomas Symon, the Gravr, of his Highness Mynt and Seales,
doe forthwth prepare a Seale for the County Palatyne of Durham, haveing
the Pourtraiture of his Highness the Lord Protector on one side, and the
armes of ye County pal. of Durham on the other side."
—
Pages 371, 372,
Council Entry Book No. 105.
The bill for making this seal, amounting to £30, was presented to the
Council on Tuesday, the 10th February, 1656-7, and the following order
was thereupon made
—
" Whereas the Counsel! did form'rly appoynt that Mr Thomas Symons,
the Graver of his Highness Mint and Seales, should provide a Seale for
the County Palatine of Durham, wch, according to a pap1 from Mr Anthony
Smith now offered, amounts unto xxx1. Ordered That xv1
, a moyety
thereof, be borne at ye States Charge, and answered out of the proffitts
that shall accrew to ye State by the Court for the said County palatyne,
and the p'son2 that shall receive the sayd proffitts for the State is to allow
ye same accordingly."
—
Page 699, Council Entry Booh, No. 105.
Mr. Eobert Eeady, of the British Museum, has supplied us with casts
of this seal, which entirely correspond with the description given in the
Council's order of the 5th September, 1656. The seal has two sides,
person.
208 Mumtmala €timmi\\iaua.
circular, and 3-8 inches in diameter. Obverse, equestrian figure of Oliver
Cromwell to the left, similar to that on the Great Seal. Behind Oliver,
in the upper part of the field, is an ornamented shield bearing the Durham
arms, a cross between four lions rampant. Below, between the horse's legs,
is a distant view, probably of the city of Durham. There is no legend on
this side, but an ornamental wreathed border of oak leaves surrounds the
whole design. Reverse, a large shield, ornamented with scrolls, flowers,
cherubs, etc., and bearing the arms of Durham—^2we, a cross between
four lions rampant, argent (but the colours not expressed.) Legend
around—AD • BEEVIA IN • EODEM • COM' • (itatu) SIGILLAND •
(urn) DEPVTATVM 1656 • (Appointed for the sealing of the writs in
the same county). Outside all is a border of oak leaves. See Plate VII.,
No. 1.
Sir Thomas Widdrington, Knt., was Chancellor of the County Pala-
tine of Durham during the Protectorate. He was appointed by Oliver's
warrant of the 3rd September, 1655. See Additional Ayscough MSS.,
No. 4184, in the British Museum.
The Dover Seal.
This seal is not mentioned in Simon's Account, nor in any other of
the State Papers, as it was most probably made by Thomas Simon for the
authorities at Dover, and paid for by them. Major-General Thomas Kelsey
was Lieutenant of Dover Castle under Oliver, and Dr. Walter Walker was
Judge of the Admiralty of the Cinque Ports.
We have never met with an impression of this seal, but a representa-
tion of it is engraved on plate xxv. of Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 4to,
London, 1753. It is called by Vertue "the Cinque Port of Dover Seal,"
and may be thus described—One side only, circular, 3 -2 inches in diameter.
In the centre is an equestrian figure of the Protector Oliver, similar to that
on his Great Seal. Between the horse's legs is a distant view of Dover
Castle, etc. On a band around is the legend—OLIVAEIVS • DEI •
GEA : EEIP • ANGLLE • SCOTLE ET HIBEBNLE &= PEOTECTOE.A wreathed border of leaves surrounds the whole.
€lj2 &ta\t nf <Mhu tfrnramill. 2°9
The Great Seal foe Scotland.
Obverse, an equestrian figure of the Protector Oliver, similar to that
on the English Great Seal. Instead however of the view of London below
the horse, there is a view of Edinburgh, including the Castle, Holyrood
Palace, the Firth of Forth, and the Fife coast in the distance. A shield in
the right-hand upper corner of the field bears the cross saltire of St.
Andrew, surmounted by a small inescutcheon with Cromwell's paternal
lion rampant. Legend—OLIVAEIVS • DEI • GEA • EEIP : ANGLLESCOTLE • ET • HIBERNLE • &= PEOTECTOE. Reverse, this side only
differs from the reverse of the English Great Seal in the shield of arms and
in the legend. The helmet, crest, motto, and supporters are the same, but
the shield bears the saltire cross of St. Andrew, surmounted by an in-
escutcheon bearing a lion rampant, Cromwell's family arms. Legend
—
MAGNVM SIGILLVM SCOTIA • 1656. This seal is circular, size 51
inches in diameter to the outside of the wreathed border with which both
sides are surrounded.
On the 12th April, 1654, an Ordinance was passed by the Protector
and his Council "for uniting Scotland into one Commonwealth with
England." The Great Seal and the other seals for Scotland were therefore
made with devices in accordance with the following clause in this Ordi-
nance
—
" And that this Union may take its more full effect and intent, Be it
further Ordained by the Authority aforesaid, That the Arms of Scotland,
viz. a Cross, commonly called Saint Andrews Cross, be received into, and
born from henceforth in the Arms of this Commonwealth, as a Badge of
this Union ; and that all the Publique Seals, Seals of Office, and Seals of
Bodies Civil or Corporate, in Scotland, which heretofore carried the Arms
of the Kings of Scotland, shall from henceforth in stead thereof, carry the
Arms of this Commonwealth."—See Henry Scobell's Collection of Acts and
Ordinances, London, 1658, part ii, p. 294, and the Collection of the Acts
and Ordinances, etc., from Dec. 16, 1653 to Sept. 3, 1654, London, 1654,
p. 95.
The English and Irish Great Seals were made in 1655, but the Scot-
tish one, as appears from the date on the reverse, could not have been
made until 1656. We have not met with any order of the Council of
210 i® trmisra n
t
e CmttnttrUiEtm;.
State relating to this latter seal, but in Thomas Simon's Account for work
done from 1650 to 1657 it is mentioned
—
"For Scotland, the Great Seal £150."
Impressions of this G-reat Seal are much rarer than those of Oliver's
English Great Seal. Mr. Henry Laing, on pages 19, 20, of his Descriptive
Catalogue of Scottish Seals, Edinburgh, 1850, describes an impression of
this seal which is in Lord Elibank's collection of charters. In the British
Museum is a metal cast of the obverse only, Detached Seal No. XXXIV.
20. A good impression, in yellow wax, belongs to J. Kermack Eord, Esq.,
Southsea.
This seal. is engraved in—G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, London,
1753, plate xix. (both sides) ; A. Collas's Tresor de Numismatique et de
Glyptique, Sceaux des Rois et Reines <t Angleterre, folio, Paris 1835, plate
xxii. (obverse only) ; A. Collas's Great Seals of England, folio, London,
1837, plate xxii. (obverse only) ; and S. Thompson's series of British
Museum Photographs of Seals, No. 995, Plate xi., 3, 4.
Samuel Desborow was Keeper of the Great Seal of Scotland under the
Protectors Oliver and Richard.
The Quarter Seal for Scotland.
There is no mention of a Quarter Seal for Scotland in the books of
the English Council of State, but it is named in Thomas Simon's Account
for work done between 1650 and 1657, where £75 is charged for making it,
or exactly half of what the Great Seal cost. This Quarter Seal was no
doubt a reproduction of the upper half of the Great Seal for Scotland, being
semicircular, and having a design on both sides. The devices were exactly
similar to those on the upper half of the Great Seal. We have never
heard of any impression now existing of this Quarter Seal, and Mr. Thomas
Dickson informs us that there is no example of it among the Scottish
archives, in the General Kegister House, Edinburgh.
The Quarter Seal, says Mr. Joseph Eobertson* was long in use in
Scotland, and can be traced back to the time of David II. It was kept by
the Director of the Chancery, and called the Testimonium Magni Sigilli, or
* " Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland," 1859, vol. ii., pp. 428, 429.
(Kjjb IbhIs nf (Dlinn Crnmmell. 211
" Testimonial of the Great Seal." It was put on an inferior class of writs.
A Quarter Seal was also used in England for a short period, in the reigns
of Edward III, Eichard II., and Henry IV., or about 1360 to 1413.
The Peivy Seal foe Scotland.
We have not met with any orders of the Council of State regarding a
Privy Seal for Scotland ; but it is mentioned in T. Simon's Account for
work done between 1650 and 1657, and a charge of £15 is made for it.
Mr. Henry Laing of Edinburgh (the author of two excellent works on
Scottish Seals) has favoured us with a cast of the seal mentioned in
Simon's Account* It is undoubtedly Simon's work, and is circular, size
2 '3 inches in diameter. In the centre is an oval ornamented shield,
bearing—Quarterly, 1st and 4th, St. George's cross; 2nd, St. Andrew's
cross ; 3rd, the Irish harp. There is no escutcheon of pretence. The field
or ground around the shield is strewn with thistles and small St. Andrew's
crosses. The legend, on a band surrounding the whole, is—THE PEIVIE •
SEALE • FOE • SCOTLAND. The seal is surrounded by a wreathed
edging of leaves. See Plate VI., No. 13.
A representation is also engraved on plate xxv. of G. Vertue's Works
of Thomas Simon, but the word PEIVIE is erroneously engraved PEIVIT.
Second Privy Seal—There is a second variety of the Privy Seal for
Scotland, used in the time of Oliver, which has been obligingly communi-
cated by Mr. Thomas Dickson, of H.M. General Eegister House, Edinburgh,
where the seal is preserved. Only one impression is known, which is
attached to a Precept in the name of the Protector Oliver, directed to the
Chancery, for expediting a Charter under the Great Seal in favour of James
Logane, of Hills, and Elizabeth his wife, given under the Privy Seal, at
Edinburgh, the 10th March, 1658. This date is not the English one, but
is new style, according to the Scottish mode of reckoning in the seventeenth
century.
The seal attached to this deed is of yellow wax, with the design on
one side only. It is very imperfect, large portions having been broken off.
* From the late Mr. Doubleday's collection of casts of seals.
212 Unraiamflti (CrnmmiUioji'.
The desiga has been circular, size 2'4 inches in diameter. In the centre is
a shield bearing St. Andrew's cross, surmounted by an inescutcheon with
the Cromwell lion rampant. Above the shield is the royal helmet, crest,
and mantling, exactly as on Oliver's Great Seal. The supporters, a lion
and a dragon, are also the same. Legend on a band around, but the portions
between brackets are wanting—[OLIVAEIVS • DEI ] GEA : EEIPVB
:
AXG[LL/£ • SCOTL/E • ET ] HIBEENLE &<= PEOTECTOE.It is a rather curious circumstance that Oliver had two privy seals
made for Scotland, but, as will have been observed, the devices are very
different. Perhaps the design of the first one was not liked, and conse-
quently the second seal with a different type was made and used.
The Signet foe Scotland.
On "Wednesday, the 9th January, 1655-6, the English Council of
State
—
" Ordered, That it be offered to his Highness as the advise of the
Counsel! That a Signet be provided for Scotland, and that Thomas Simon,
the Engraver, doe forthwth prepare the same."
—
Page 121, Draft Order Book,
No. 86.
At the afternoon meeting of the Council on Friday, the 11th January,
this order was approved by the Protector (page 130, same book).
The seal was accordingly made, and Simon's charge of £5 for it
appears in his Account for work done between 1650 and 1657 ; but wehave not been able to discover any impression of it. Mr. Thomas Dickson
informs us that he has never met with any example among the Scottish
records.
The Seal foe the Scottish Council.
This seal was made by Thomas Simon in October, 1655, and presented
to the Council of State in London on the 26th of that month. It was
then approved of, and was probably at once sent to Scotland for use by the
Council there. All the entries in the State Papers regarding this seal
have been printed above, in our account of the seal of the English Council.
€\t lids nf CMttru Crumuull. 2}3
The Scottish Council's seal is circular, size 1'65 inches in diameter.
In the centre is an ornamented shield, surrounded by a laurel wreath, and
bearing a large cross saltire (St. Andrew's cross) surmounted by Cromwell's
lion rampant on an escutcheon of pretence. The legend, around the whole,
is—SIGILLVM • CONCILLII SCOTLE (the seal of the Council of
Scotland). A wreathed border of leaves surrounds the seal. See woodcut.
A fair impression of this seal is in the Public Eecord Office, London,
affixed to a letter signed by General George Monk, on behalf of the Scot-
tish Council, dated Edinburgh the 18th November, 1657, and addressed to
the Council of State at Whitehall (Interregnum State Papers, No. 840,
p. 644). There are also a few other impressions in the same office.
By the courtesy of Mr. Thomas Dickson, of the General Eegister
House, Edinburgh, we learn that there are two impressions of this seal
preserved in that office. The British Museum also possesses a bad im-
pression of this seal, on a letter to the Protector Oliver from the Scottish
Council, signed by Monk, and dated Edinburgh, the 8th April, 1658 (Ad^
ditional MS., No. 4158).
The seal of the Scottish Council was impressed over paper wafers from
a steel die made by Simon, for which he charged £8. (See his Account,
below.) We also observe that, in a list of articles of stationery for the use
of the Council of Scotland, ordered to pass custom free into that country,
25th August, 1657, there is the item—" 5000 broad Wafers, for the Coun-
sell's Seale."
—
{Page 107, Council Entry Book, No. 106, London).
214 SJEnrismitin Crnmmilliimit.
The Great Seal foe Ireland.
Obverse, an equestrian figure of the Protector Oliver, similar to that on
the English Great Seal, but with a view of Dublin under the horse, showing
the harbour and forts, the city, and the hills in the distance. A shield in
the right-hand upper corner of the field bears a large harp, surmounted by
a small inescutcheon charged with Cromwell's paternal lion rampant.
Legend—OLIVAEIVS DEI • GEA • REIP ANGLLE SCOTLE • ET •
HIBEENIiE • &<= PEOTECTOE. Reverse, shield, helmet, crest, sup-
porters, and motto similar to those on the English Great Seal, but the arms
are—a large Irish harp, surmounted by an inescutcheon bearing a lion
rampant, Cromwell's family arms. Legend—MAGNTM ' SIGLLLVM •
HIBEENLE • 1655. This seal is circular, size 5'3 inches in diameter, to
the outside of the wreathed border with which both sides are surrounded.
In the books of the English Council of State, the first entry relating
to the Irish Great Seal is the following order of
—
Wednesday, 21st February, 1654-5.—" Uppon a report made from the
Comittee for ye Affaires of Ireland, Ordered That it be offered to his High-
ness as the advise of the Counsell, That a Great Seale be made for Ireland
and deliv'red to some fitt person or persons for executing ye powers of the
Co"1 of Chancery there."
—
Page 46, Draft Order Book, No. 82.
This order was approved by the Protector on Tuesday, the 6th March,
1654-5 (page 70, Draft Order Book, No. 82).
On Priday, the 30th March, 1655, at the afternoon meeting, Thomas
Simon submitted a drawing of the proposed seal to the Council for their
approval, which was thereupon given in these terms
—
" Ord.[ered] That it be offered to his Highness, as the advise of ye
Counsel, That a Great Seale for Ireland be ingraven according to the .
draught prepared by Mr Symon and now show'd, and that a War' 2 be in
that behalfe issued."^-Pfl</e 115, Draft Order Book, No. 82.
A clerk's note in the margin states that a warrant was prepared, signed
by the President of the Council on the 31st March, and sent to Simon on
the 2nd April, 1655.
In Simon's Petition of the 25th May, 1655, the Great Seal for Ireland
is mentioned as being then in preparation, and on the same day £200 were
1 Court. 2 Warrant.
%\t IbuIs nf <blhn (Cinmmill. 215
advanced to him on account of this and the English Great Seal. See
page 187, above.
The last order of the Council on this subject relates to the legend on
the reverse of the seal
—
Thursday, 7th June, 1655 (post meridiem).—" Ordered by his High-
nes the Lord Protector and the Counsell, That the Motto incompassing the
Great Seale of Ireland be Magnum Sigillmm Hibernim, and that Mr Symonthe Ingraver of the Mint and Seales doe proceed accordingly."—Pages 127,
.
128, Draft Order Book, No. 83.
This order was approved on the 9th June, and sent to Simon on
the 11th.
Simon's charge for making the Irish Great Seal was the same as that
for the Scottish one, viz. £150. See his Account for work done between
1650 and 1657, printed belpw.
A good impression of this seal, in yellow wax, is attached to an In-
quisition of the Protector Eichard Cromwell, dated 25th February, 1658-9
;
which document has descended in the Cromwell family, and is now in the
care of Frederick Prescott, Esq.
Another impression, a detached seal, also in yellow wax, is in the
Museum of the Eoyal Irish Academy, Dublin ; and a fine impression in
red wax, but of the obverse only, is in the British Museum, Detached Seal,
No. XXXIV. 18.
This seal is engraved in—A. Collas's Trtsor de Numismatique et de
Glyptique, Sceaux des Rois et Reines d'Angleterre, Paris, 1835, plate xxiii.
;
A. Collas's Great Seals of England, London, 1837, plate xxiii. ; and S.
Thompson's series of British Museum Photographs of Seals, No. 997,
Plate L, 3, 4.
The Lord Chancellor and Keeper of the Great Seal, in Ireland, during
the Protectorate, was William Steel, appointed August, 1656. He received
a salary of £2000 per annum (see Council Entry Book, orders of the 4th
September, 1656).
The Signet foe Ireland.
On Thursday, the 7th June, 1655, at the afternoon sitting of the
English Council of State, it was—
216 &nwisw&ii CtzvmtWiann.
" Ordered by his Highness the Lord Protector and the Connsell
that Mr Symon, the Ingraver of the Mint and Seales, doe p'vide1 a Seale
Manuall for Ireland."—Page 128, Draft Order Book, No. 83.
This order does not appear to have ever been approved, nor is a Signet
or Seal Manual for Ireland mentioned in Simon's Account for work done
between 1650 and 1657. Neither have we met with any impression of
such a seal, and we therefore do not think that it was ever made.
The Seal for the Irish Council.
It appears from Simon's Account that he made a seal for the Irish
Council, at a cost of £8, but we have not been able to obtain any descrip-
tion or impression of it.
The Seals for the Irish Law Courts.
On Wednesday, the 21st February, 1654-5, it was ordered by Oliver's
English Council of State
—
" That Judges and other persons be appointed necessary for executing
ye powers of the Excheqr in Ireland ; That such Seales also be appointed
as shalbe necessary for ye severall Courts in Ireland."
—
Page 46, Draft
Order Book, No. 82.
This order was approved by the Protector on Tuesday, the 6th March
(page 70, same book).
In Thomas Simon's Account for work done between 1650 and 1657,
printed below, there are mentioned " three seals for the Upper Bench, the
Common Pleas, and the Exchequer, in Ireland : £50 each."
Upper Bench or Common Pleas.—We have been favoured by Mr. Henry
Laing with a cast of an interesting seal by Simon, which must have been
intended for either the Court of Upper Bench or of Common Pleas, in
Ireland. The legend does not state for which court it was made. In the
British Museum, Detached Seal, No. XXXIV., 21, is a cast in metal of the
same seal. The device is on one side only, circular, size 33 inches in
1 provide.
$jjt iBttla nf (Dltiir (Crnraraill. 21 ^
diameter. It bears an equestrian figure of Oliver, a shield with the Irish
' arms behind him, and a view of Dublin below, between the horse's legs.
The view is, however, slightly different from that on the Irish Great Seal.
On a band around the whole is the legend—OLIVAEIVS • DEI • GEA
:
EEIP • ANGLIC • SCOTLE • ET • HIBEENLE &c PEOTECTOE. This
seal has Simon's usual wreathed border of leaves. See Plate VI., No. 14.
The Exchequer Court.—We have never met with an impression of the
seal for the Irish Exchequer, but a representation of it is engraved on
plate xxv. of George Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, London, 1753, from
which we take the following description
—
The design is on one side only. Circular, size 33 inches in diameter.
In the centre is an oval ornamented shield, bearing—Quarterly, 1st and
4th, St. George's cross ; 2nd, the Irish harp ; 3rd, St. Andrew's cross ; but
we suspect that Vertue has erroneously transposed the 2nd and 3rd
quarterings in his engraving. The field, or ground around the shield, is
strewn with small St. George's crosses and Irish harps. The legend, on a
band surrounding the whole, is—THE SEALE • OF • THE • EXCHE-QVOE • EOE • IEELAND. The seal has Simon's usual wreathed edging
of leaves. Vertue, in 1749, possessed impressions of this seal and the
Scottish Privy Seal in lead.
Thomas Simon's Account.
Having discovered, among the State Papers at the Public Eecord
Office, London, a copy of the Account of Thomas Simon for all the work
that he did for the Parliament and the Protector from 1650 to 1657, we
think it will prove interesting to our readers if printed here, as it has been
hitherto unknown to all antiquaries.
This Account was laid before the Council of State on Thursday, the
6th August, 1657 (Entry Book, No. 106, p. 62), when it was referred to
the two Clerks of the Council, Henry Scobell and William Jessop, for them
to examine and consider it, and report thereon to the Council. This report
was accordingly made, and read before the Council on Thursday, the 15th
October, 1657 (Entry Book, No. 106, p. 218), but the Account was referred
218 jPu mis rant! Crnramillinua.
back to the Clerks of the Council for them to- examine into the rates
charged.
On Thursday, the 14th January, 1657-8, the Clerks again presented
Simon's Account, and reported that " they had therein consulted S r John
Barkstead, knt, who, upon a view of the pticulars,1 had declared his opinion
y',2 considering the nature and ingenuity of the woike, he did judge the
prizes3 demaunded as aforesayd might be well allow'd." (Entry Book,
No. 106, p. 405). A copy of the Account is entered in the Council Entry
Book under this date, and we print it below, verbatim et literatim.
It will be observed that the whole of this Account amounted to
£1728 . 5s. 8d., but out of this sum Simon had been already paid £700,
viz : £200 by the Council's warrant of the 25th May, 1655 (Money Warrant
Book, No. 126, p. 155 ; £200 more by an order of the Council of the 5th
September, 1655 (Draft Order Book, No. 85, p. 21) ; and £300 by the
Council's warrant of the 18th January, 1655-6, and their orders of the
16th and 25th January, 1655-6 (Money Warrant Book, No. 126, p. 189,
and Draft Order Books, No. 86, p. 137, and No. 87, p. 21).
Accordingly, on the 14th January, 1657-8, the sum remaining due on
Simon's Account was £1028 . 5*. 8d., and the Council therefore recom-
mended that the Protector should issue a warrant to the Commissioners of
the Treasury for paying this sum to Thomas Simon (Entry Book, No. 106,
p. 405). On the 19th of the same month, the Council ordered that this
warrant should pass without fees (Entry Book, No. 106, p. 411) ; and the
Privy Seal Warrant for paying £1028 . 5s. 8d. to Thomas Simon, dated the
8th March, 1657-8, is enrolled in Oliver's Privy Seal Book, No. 13, p. 246.
Although the Privy Seal Warrant was thus prepared, it seems that
Simon received no money on it for some time, for, on the 13th July, 1658,
he petitioned the Council for speedy payment of the sum due to him by
the Privy Seal, " that soe hee may satisfy his creditors," stating also " that
hee hath himselfe and servants wroght above theas 5 yeares for your Honrs,
and hath not received any reeompence for his greate paynes, and that hee
doth pay interest for Gold and Silver that eates up the prophit4 of a
greate part thereof." Annexed to this Petition is a further bill for £132 .
16s., being £12 . 16s. for two chased silver boxes (weighing 32 oz. 4 dwts.)
to hold the Swedish Treaty, and £120 for a gold medal and chain (weighing
1 particulars. 2 that. 3 prices. * profit.
€\)t ItalH nf (Dliirtr (Crnmmtl 219
27 oz. 5 dwts. 12 grs.) for presentation to the Portuguese Ambassador.
(Interregnum Petitions, vol. xii. s.)
On reading this Petition, on Tuesday, the 3rd August, 1658, afternoon
sitting, the Council ordered—" That ye Lord Disbrow be desired to speake
with Mr Sherwin, about paying the sayd Warrant to the petrl, and to deale
with him in jt 2 behalfe as effectually as he cann, in order to ye petrs speedy
satisfaccon."
—
(Entry Book, No. 106, p. 777).
Pour months later, on the 7th December, 1658, Simon was paid £200
on account (Pells Issue Book, No. 93, p. 53), and on the 5th February,
1658-9, he received £78 . 5s. 8d. more (Pells Issue Book, No. 93, p. 105)
;
but these are all the payments we can find recorded. Whether Simon was
ever paid the sum of £882 . 16s. still owing to him for work done, it is
impossible to say.
Thomas Simon's Account foe Seals, Medals, Coins, etc., made since
the year 1650. Prom the- Council Entry Book, No. 106, pages 404,
405, under date of the 14th January, 1657-8. [The letters inserted
between brackets refer to the explanatory notes subjoined.]
" The 2 Seales for Congleton burr, iiij 1 xvs; a Steele"]
Seale for the pliant xv! [a], a Steele Seale for the ComrsI
of the Navy v1; 2 Steele Seales in imitacon of Charles y
Stuarts xvj 1; and 2 Steele Stamps for ye Excheqr xls
, al-
leadged to be provided in the tyme of the long p'liam' . .
1. s. d.
42 . 15 . 00
"A Seale for the Comrs for approveing publique.
preachers v1 xvs [b] ; 2 Seales for the Comrs of y« Adni1?|
iiij 1 xs [c], and for altering the late Counsell of States|
Seal xls [^
12.05.00
"Por England, the great Seale cc1,
[e], privy Seale,
xx1[/], Signett xv* [g], Signet in Steele xvl [h], a Steele
(
Seale for Letters of State xxv1 [i], and ye Counsells Seale
|
xiiij 1 [A]
289 . 00 . 00
petitioner. that.
220 jgnniismntit ^rumnnlliittin.
" For Scotland, Great Seale cl1 [Z], quarter Seale lxxv1 \
[to], Privy Seale xv1 [n], Signett v1 [o], and ye Counsells > 253 . 00 . 00
Seale viij1[p],
*
" For Ireland, Great Seale cl1 [q] ; 3 Seales for the \
Upp Bench, Corhon Pleas, Exchequo^ 501 each [r] ; and [ 308 . 00 . 00
Counsells Seale viij 1 [s] ,
" For Coynes, Stamps, Dyes &c. [t] . . . . 250 . 00 . 00 :
"For Meddalls to Major Bedman xl1, Col. Sadler 50 1
, | „-„ n ~ nn
Swedish Agent c1, Duke of Curlands Agent cxx1. . J
"For Silver Boxes for the Treatyes w^1 Denmarke, \ r- n efto
Swed', France, and Portugal! J
"For Presses for Seales 78.00.00.
" For Contingencyes, Viz4, makeing Originall draughts n
l1, expence in attendance xxx1, and Iron, Steele, Smiths > 130 . 00 . 00 .
worke &c. I1 )
"Makeing in the Totall . . . 1728.05.08
Towards which he received, 25 May 1655, cc1; 11*1 i?aa nn m
Sept' 1655, cc1; and 18 Jan1? 1655, ccc1
; in Tot. . . I
" And soe there rests disburst above his receipts . 1028 . 05 . 08 .
" [a] A steel seal for the Parliament, £15."—This is probably the seal
of which a proof impression is in the British Museum, Detached Seal,
No. xxxv. 90. It was taken by the late Mr. J. Doubleday in 1832 from
the original matrix then in the possession of Mr. Langdale. We are in-
formed that this matrix now belongs to Mr. Stopford, of Drayton. This
seems to be the same seal or matrix that was found by a workman in a
wall of Bichard Cromwell's house at Hursley, Hants, when it was being
pulled down by order of Sir William Heathcote, who had purchased the
(EjjE. iEitb nf (Dliair €nvmtll. 221
estate. See George Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, 2nd edition, 1780,
page 13 ; and there is an engraving of it by Vertue on plate v. of the same
book. The seal has in the centre two large pointed shields, conjoined, and
surrounded by ornamental scrolls and foliage. The dexter shield bears
St. George's cross, for England, and the sinister one the Irish harp. Out-
side of a corded inner circle is the legend—THE SEALE OE THE •
PAKLIAMENT • OF THE • COMMONWEALTH OF • ENGLAND.A wreathed edging of leaves surrounds the whole seal, which is circular,
24 inches in diameter. See Plate VII., No. 2.
This seal is no doubt the one referred to in the following Act of Par-
liament
—
" An Act for a Seal of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England.
—22nd January, 1650-1.—Be it Enacted by this present Parliament, That
the Seal Engraven with the Arms of England and Ireland (that is to say,
A Cross and a Harp) with, this Inscription in the Circle, that is to say
(The Seal of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England) shall be the
Seal of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England, to be onely used
by Order of Parliament. And be it further Enacted, That whosoever shall
. counterfeit the same, shall be adjudged and taken to be guilty of High
Treason, and shall be tryed in such maner, and undergo the like penalties
as are appointed by any Act of Parliament in case of High Treason."—See
the King's Pamphlets in the British Museum, single sheets, vol. ix.
"[5] A seal for the Commissioners for Approving Public Preachers,
£5 . 15s."—This is the seal with St. George's cross in the centre, described
above on page 205.
"[c] Two seals for the Commissioners of the Admiralty, £4 . 10s."—See
the account of the seals of the Admiralty on page 203, above.
" [d] For altering the late Council of State's seal, 40s."—The seal made
in 1649 by Simon for the Council of State, and the one used by them from
February, 1649, to December, 1653, is circular, size 1-8 inches in diameter.
The device consists of two ornamented shields, conjoined, one bearing St.
George's cross and the other the Irish harp. Outside of a plain inner circle
is the legend—THE • SEALE OF • THE • COVNcel • OF • STATE
222 Mnmismata ^rnnmiBUiDiiit.
APPOYNTED • BY THE • AVTHO' • OP PAEL'. A wreathed edging
of leaves around. See Plate VII., No. 3.
There are numerous impressions of this seal, over paper wafers, in the
Public Eecord Office and in the British Museum. The alteration mentioned
in Simon's Account above, was the cutting out of the legend on this seal
after Oliver had been made Protector, and a new Council had been ap-
pointed by the Instrument of Government dated the 16th December, 1653.
Impressions of this latter seal, exhibiting a plain band in place of the
legend, are to be found on documents of the years 1654 and 1655, in the
Public Eecord Office. See Plate VII., No. 4. Directly however that the
new seal with the legend SIGILLVM CONCILLII (described on page 198,
above) was made, this altered seal was laid aside by the Council of State.
" [e] The Great Sealfor England, £200."— See the description on pages
19 and 186, above.
" [/] The p™vy Sealfor England, £20."—See page 20 and 192, above.
"[ff]
The Signet for England, £15."—See description on pages 195,
et seq., above.
" [A] The Signet in Steel, £15."—We do not know what seal is here
meant.
" [i] A steel sealfor Letters of State, £25."—This is described on page
194, above.
" [k] The Council's Seal, £14."—The seal for the English Council of
State is described on page 198, above.
"[/] The Great Seal for Scotland, £150."—See description on page
209, above.
" [m] The Quarter Seal for Scotland, £75."—See description on page
210, above.
#jjt luls nf cD liner <Crnntm*U. 223
"[m] 7%e Pmy Sealfor Scotland, £15."—See description on page 211,
above.
" [o] The Signet for Scotland, £5."—Impressions of this seal are not
now known to exist; see page 212, above.
" 0] The Council's Seal, £8."—The seal of the Scottish Council of
State is described on page 213, above.
"M The Great Sealfor Ireland, £150."—See description on page 214,
above.
" [r] Three seals for the Upper Bench, Common Pleas, and Exchequer,
£50 each."—See the descriptions of the Seals of the Irish Law Courts, page
216, above.
" [s] The Council's Seal, £8."—The seal of the Irish Council of State
is not now extant, see page 216, above.
" [t] For Coins, Stamps, Dies, etc., £250."—See page 97, above, and the
accounts of the 1656 and 1658 coinages of Cromwell's coins in Chapters III.
and IV. of this work.
APPENDIX.
ADDITIONAL NOTES.
Page 3, lines 5 et seg.—The original manuscript of this letter of Oliver
Cromwell is stated to have been once in the possession of James Lamb,
Esq., of Fairford, Gloucestershire, and afterwards (about 1780) belonged
to John Baymond, Esq., of the same place. See page 73* of the second
edition of G. Vertue's Works of Thomas Simon, London, 1780. We have
been unable to discover where the original letter now is, but an old manu-
script copy of it is in the British Museum, Additional MSB., No. 9828,
f. 201.
Page 5, line 7.—Nicholas Briot must have been dead before 1656, for
we find among the Abstracts of Interregnum Petitions in the Public Eecord
Office, mention of a petition to the Protector from Hester Briot, relict of
Nich. Briot, dated the 22nd January, 1655-6. It states that £2806 was
due to Briot at his death, and his widow prays a considerable sum in lieu
thereof, or a competent pension till discharged.
Page 6, line 3.—The engraving by J. Hulett is a vignette on the title-
page to " The First Panegyric Englished," between pages 48 and 49 of the
Eev. E. Peck's Memoirs of Oliver Cromwell, London, 1740. The DunbarMedal No. 1 is also engraved in—Eaguenet's Histoire a" Olivier Gromwel,
1691, page 235, Gregorio Leti's Vita di Oliviero Cromvele, 1692, vol. ii.,
p. 218, G. Letis' Vie d'Olivier Cromwel, 1694, vol. ii., p. 187, and in G. van
Loon's Beschryving der Nederlandsche Historipenningen, 1723, vol. ii., p. 368.
Page 7, line 29.—The original steel dies of the large Dunbar Medal,
much worn and cracked, and each enclosed in an iron frame, have been
appinliii. 225
shown to the Author by Mr. A. B. Wyon, the eminent medallist, in whose
possession they now are. The dies were purchased many years ago by
Mr. Wyon's father.
Page 8, line 6.—The small gold Dunbar Medal in the British Museum
is perhaps the one formerly in the collection of Thomas Herbert, the eighth
Earl of Pembroke; and which sold at the Pembroke sale for £11 . 10s.,
lot 259, 2nd August, 1848. It is engraved in Tab. 19, Part IV. of the
Pembroke plates, entitled
—
Nummi Anglici et Scotici, cum aliquot Numis-
matibus recentioribus, collegit Thomas Pembrochia et Montis Gomerici Comes,
London, 1746, quarto.
Page 8, line 9.—The Author has recently (1876) added to his collec-
tion an example of the small Dunbar Medal, No. II., with devices on both
sides, struck in tin, very finely preserved, but without the loop. It appears
to have been an original artist's proof, struck by Simon himself.
Page 9, line 10.—Here should have been inserted the description of
the Dunbar Medal No. IV. See, however, Chapter V., page 173.
Page 10, line 20.—The Eev. Canon Marsden's specimen of the Lord
General Medal is an original artist's proof, struck upon a circular piece of
gold \\ inches in diameter. It shows a faint line (which in later speci-
mens became a crack) running through the letters " el . mi " of the legend.
It is in very fine preservation, and has the device, motto, and initials of
Thomas Hollis, its former possessor, engraved on the back.—The Author
possesses a very fine original impression of this medal, on a circular piece
of silver, which is without the least trace of the crack in the die. It must
therefore have been one of the very first impressions that were struck.
Page 11, line 6.—The original steel die of the Lord General Medal,
much cracked, and with the small piece broken off the top, is now in the
possession of Mr. A B. Wyon.
Page 18, line 26.—Miss Ffarington, of Worden, possesses a specimen
of the Inauguration Medal in copper.
226 Mumismata Crnramillhmt.
Page 18, last line.—The engraving by J. Hulett is printed on the title-
page to " Panegyrieus Cromwelli Tertius," between pages 36 and 37 of the
Eev. F. Peek's Memoirs of Oliver Cromwell, London, 1740. Other illustra-
tions of the same medal may be found in—Eaguenet's Histoire d! Olivier
Cromwel, 1691, page 277, G. Leti's Vie d' Olivier Cromwel, 1694, vol. ii.,
p. 280, and in G. van Loon's Besckryving der Nederlandsche Historipenningen,
1723, vol. ii., p. 379.
G-. Leti, in his Vie d'Olivier Cromwel, Amsterdam, 1694, vol. ii., p. 280,
says that these Inauguration Medals were thrown to the people out of the
windows of Whitehall, on the occasion of Oliver's being appointed Pro-
tector in December, 1653.
Pages 19 and 20.—Great Seal and Privy Seal for England.-.—See
further particulars in Chapter VI., pages 186 and 192.
Page 25, line 17.—Dr. Young, the Keeper, has kindly forwarded the
following particulars regarding the Cromwell and Fairfax medal in the
Hunterian Museum, Glasgow. It is like Plate II., No.' 1., and is struck in
silver, ^Vth inch thick. The letters " T. s. F." are clearly visible (though
very small) on both sides of the medal, just below each bust. It is well
preserved, and better struck than the specimen in the British Museum.These are the only two examples known to exist.
Page 34, line 24.—It appears frdm the State Papers that the Christian
name of the Auditor Beale was " Bartholomew."
Page 35, line 7.—From other documents it seems that the first nameshould have been " James Hoare " not " James Howard."
Page 36, line 23.—The Under-Graver during the latter part of the
Protectorate appears to have been Nicholas Birch.—See the Petition of
E. Pight, page 597, vol. x. of Petitions, Interregnum State Papers.
Page 36, line 25.—Simon's Patent of the 9th July, 1656, has been
already printed in the Appendix to the second edition of G. Vertue's Works
of Thomas Simon, 1780, pp. 67—72 ; and, as it is very lengthy and unin-
appm&ii. 227
teresting, we think it unnecessary to reprint the document here. The
original iurolment may be seen in the Public Eecord Office, London, on pp.
142—147 of Oliver's Patent Book, No. 12.
Page 46, last line.—From Sir Bernard Burke's Dictionary of Landed
Gentry it appears that Sir Balph Maddison belonged to the family of Mad-
dison, of Fonaby, Lincolnshire, and was knighted in 1603.
Page 63.
—
Peter Blondeau.—The publication of Mrs. Green's valuable
Calendar of State Papers, 1649-50, has made known to us the following
additional paper of Blondeau's, which is curious and interesting. The
subjoined copy is taken verbatim et literatim from the original manuscript,
one and a quarter pages folio, all in a clerk's hand, except Blondeau's sig-
nature {Interregnum State Papers, vol. ix., no. 2, in the Public Eecord
Office) :—" The French Minter's Second Proposition, 26th February, 1649-50.
" By my former Proposition I said I could two severall ways make
the new extraordinary Coyne marked with Letters at the circonference
upon the thicknesse of the brime ; the first way is auncient, wch may be
knowne to severall persons, but it is long in doing, & cannot be used upon
the Ordinary Coyne that is thinne.
" But I can doe it by another manner, wc}l is a particular Invention
found out by me, & no man but I can doe it, whereof I made severall
tryalls, & among others the peeces I have exhibited are of my making
that way.
" And whereas I have beene told that some persons have endeavoured
to persuade you that they can doe it as well as my selfe, & even have
shewed you some peeces of their making, I can assure you upon my life,
that their peeces are made by the first way, wch is knowne both to myselfe & many others.
" I can further assure you that they cannot coyne yc? money that way,
although you should give them ten shillings for each pound of Silver.
"I say more, for I offer myselfe to be committed to such prison as
you will thinke fitt, for two months together, & if within that time you can
-finde any man that knows my Invention, not only in England, but all the
world over, & that might coyne that way I have propounded, as well, with
2-28 UtrraismniB (£nunm?llion.
as much diligence & expedition, & as cheape as I doe offer underneath, I
am content in such a case to lose my life, & shall acknowledge myselfe
guilty of having offered to informe falsly & cosen the Parliament & the
Counsel! of State of the Common-wealth of England. In witnesse whereof
I have subscribed this present with my owne hand, in London the 26th of
February, 1649.
" Pierre Blondeau."
Subjoined is
—
" Peeter Blondeau's Proposition to the right honorable the Commis-
sioners of the Mint.
" The Gold being given unto me at the same degree of goodnesse the
Mint ought to be, if I be bound to cast it & recast it into plate, & main-
tain all the Machines & TJtensills & generally whatsoever shalbe needfull,
except the Stamps & the Graver, I will make the money compleatly
according to my Proposition for ten shelings the pound of Gold.
" And for the Silver it being given unto me at the same degree of
goodnesse the Mint ought to be, & I be bound to cast & recast it into plate
& maintain all at my charges, except the Stamps & the Graver, I will com-
pleatly make the money, according to the Proposition [I] doe make, for
sixteene pence the pound of silver.
"And if any one will undertake the double melting, & beare the
waste in the sd meltings, so that I doe not meddle with the same, I will
abate foure pence for each pound of Silver. And for the Gold propor-
tionably.
" But in case I be desired to furnish the Stamps & pay the Graver,
then I must have foure pence more for each pound of Gold,
" And a peny & a halfe for each pound of Silver, provided the great-
nesse of the coyne be proportionable to its thicknesse."
Page 67, line 31.
—
Ramage's Half-crown.—Mint-mark: a mullet, oneach side.
THE EXD.
BILLING AND SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD, SURREY.
EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES.
Plates I. to VIII. should be bound up at the end of the booh, immediately fol-
lowing this Explanation.
PLATE I.
1. The Dunbar Medal No. I.
2. The Dunbar Medal No. II.
3. The Dunbar Medal No. III. .
4. The " Lord General " Medal .
5. The Pattern Farthing, dated 1651, Type I.
6. The Inauguration Medal
7. The Privy Seal
PLATE IL
1. Medal of Cromwell and Fairfax
2. Medal of Sir Thomas Fairfax .
3. Dutch Medal on the Peace of Westminster
4. Pewter Farthing No. I.
5. Pewter Farthing No. II.
1. Fifty-shilling Piece or Broad
2. Half-broad of 1656 (Tanner's)
3. Half-broad of 1656 (Simon's)
4. Half-crown of 1656 .
5. Half-broad of 1658
6. Crown of 1658 (Simon's)
7. Half-crown of 1658 .
8. Shilling of 1658
1. Six-pence of 1658 (Simon's)
2. Tanner's Crown
3. Tanner's Shilling
4. Tanner's Six-pence
PLATE III.
PLATE IV.
PAGE5
. 10
12 and 154
18
20 and 192
25
25
51
55
55
102 and 105
138
106
108
139
129
133
135
136
141
143
145
230 iSipUnntiiin nf til? flairs.
5. The Dutch Crown
6. Pattern Farthing, Type II.
7. Pattern Farthing, Type III.
8. Pattern Farthing, Type IV.
9. Pattern Farthing, Type V.
PLATE V.
1. Dutch Satirical Medal Xo. I. .
2. Dutch Satirical Medal Xo. II. .
3. Funeral Medal, by Simon
4. Imitation Funeral Medal Xo. I.
5. Imitation Funeral Medal Xo. II.
6. Imitation Inauguration Medal
PLATE VI.
1. Oliver's Private Seal Xo. I.
Xo. II.
Xo. III.
Xo. III.
Xo. IV.
Xo..V
Xo. VI.
Xo. VII.
3- ,i „
4
5- » j>
6 - ,, »
'* >> j?
8- „ >,
9. Official Signet before Protectorate
10. The Signet for England
11. The Seal for the English Council
12. The Seal for Approbation of Ministers
13. The Privy Seal for Scotland .
14. Seal for an Irish Law Court[In the centre of the plate.]
PLATE VII.
1. The Seal for the County of Durham .
2. The Seal of the Parliament
3. The Seal of the Council of State
4. The Altered Seal of the Council
PLATE VIII.
Oliver's Great Seal for England ....[Eeduced in size from the diameter of of inches.]
PAGE147
154
155
155
156
160
161
167
170
171
174
179
179
181
181
181
182
183
184
184
195
198
206
211
216
208
221
221
9
19 and 186
PLATE
.-""\V> '•-.
X^;,
^<vf\J\rG-s
PLATE III.
PLATE IV.
' - * tr
PLATE VI.
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